Positioning

Volume 2, Issue 1 (February 2011)

ISSN Print: 2150-850X   ISSN Online: 2150-8526

Google-based Impact Factor: 1  Citations  

Limited Bandwidths and Correlation Ambiguities: Do They Co-Exist in Galileo Receivers

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 478KB)  PP. 14-21  
DOI: 10.4236/pos.2011.21002    7,530 Downloads   14,478 Views  Citations
Author(s)

Affiliation(s)

.

ABSTRACT

Galileo is the Global Navigation Satellite System that Europe is building and it is planned to be operational in the next 3-5 years. Several Galileo signals use split-spectrum modulations, such as Composite Binary Offset Carrier (CBOC) modulation, which create correlation ambiguities when processed with large or infinite front-end bandwidths (i.e., in wideband receivers). The correlation ambiguities refer to the notches in the correlation shape (i.e., in the envelope of the correlation between incoming signal and reference modulated code) which happen within +/– 1 chip from the main peak. These correlation ambiguities affect adversely the detection probabilities in the code acquisition process and are usually dealt with by using some form of unambiguous processing (e.g., BPSK-like techniques, sideband processing, etc.). In some applications, such as mass-market applications, a narrowband Galileo receiver (i.e., with considerable front-end bandwidth limitation) is likely to be employed. The question addressed in this paper, which has not been answered before, is whether or not this bandwidth limitation can cope inherently with the ambiguities of the correlation function, to which extent, and which the best design options are in the acquisition process (e.g., in terms of time-bin step and ambiguity mitigation mechanisms).

Share and Cite:

E. Lohan, "Limited Bandwidths and Correlation Ambiguities: Do They Co-Exist in Galileo Receivers," Positioning, Vol. 2 No. 1, 2011, pp. 14-21. doi: 10.4236/pos.2011.21002.

Cited by

[1] 10 Acquisition and Tracking of BOC Signals
GNSS Software Receivers, 2022
[2] SCER Spoofing Attacks on the Galileo Open Service and Machine Learning Techniques for End-User Protection
2020
[3] Galileo Signals Acquisition Using Enhanced Subcarrier Elimination Conversion and Faster Processing
2015
[4] Advanced Acquisition and Tracking Algorithms
GALILEO Positioning Technology, 2015
[5] Multi-GNSS signals acquisition techniques for software defined receivers.
2015
[6] Unambiguous Tracking Method Based on Combined Correlation Functions for sine/cosine-BOC CBOC and AltBOC Modulated Signals
Radioengineering, 2014
[7] Receiver Technology
2014
[8] Contribución al diseño de GNSS-SDR, un receptor GNSS de código abierto
2013
[9] Contribución al dise?o de GNSS-SDR, un receptor GNSS de código abierto
2013
[10] Complex step-shape binary offset carrier modulation for a unitary analytical framework of GNSS signals
Wireless personal communications, 2013
[11] An Open Source Galileo E1 Software Receiver
2012
[12] Centre Tecnol. de Telecomunicacions de Catalunya (CTTC), Castelldefels, Spain
Satellite Navigation Technologies and European Workshop on GNSS Signals and Signal Processing,(NAVITEC), 2012 6th ESA Workshop o, 2012

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.