GNSS系统间时间偏移估计及其对高空SSV的影响

S. Ugazio, Brian C. Peters, Kevin Croissant, Gregory Jenkins, Ryan McKnight, F. Graas
{"title":"GNSS系统间时间偏移估计及其对高空SSV的影响","authors":"S. Ugazio, Brian C. Peters, Kevin Croissant, Gregory Jenkins, Ryan McKnight, F. Graas","doi":"10.33012/2020.17146","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"INTRODUCTION A core aspect of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) is the time scale they use to operate. Since they use independent time scales, inter-system time-offsets are one of the most significant biases to be taken into account in a multi-constellation solution, and in the framework of interoperability. In [1] a performance analysis is presented considering GPS, Galileo, GLONASS and BeiDou, showing inter-system time-offsets on the order of 10 to 100 ns. \n\nWhile a multi-system solution enables more satellites in view and possibly a better Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP), it must be taken into account that any additional constellation involves an additional bias. So, if a single-constellation solution involves four unknowns, including the user’s spatial coordinates and the receiver time offset, a multi-system solution exploiting measurements from N_GNSS constellations involves 4 + N_GNSS^-1 unknows, where the additional N_GNSS^_1 unknows are the inter-system time offsets to be estimated. This means that in order to get an improvement with respect to a single-system solution, at least two satellites from any additional constellation must be in view. \n\nIn general, on-Earth users have enough satellites in view to get an improvement in GDOP thanks to a multi-GNSS solution. However, this is not always true when the user is in a low-visibility environment. In those cases, a multi-GNSS solution would ideally be beneficial, providing more satellites in view. On the other hand, the inter-system time-biases may constitute the bottle neck, and actually make the solution unavailable. Different approaches have been proposed to overcome this issue. The ICG-IGS Joint Trial Project (IGS-IGMA), led by the International Committee on GNSS (ICG) and the International GNSS Service (IGS), includes as long term objectives to “make all performance standard entries for each GNSS openly available” and to “provide a multi-GNSS service performance standard” [2]. The IGS Multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) [3-5] has, among its objectives to provide multi-GNSS products, exploit the IGS monitoring station network, and estimate biases and provide standards. In [6], different methods for the estimation of the inter-system biases are evaluated; the measurement model is constrained assuming the inter-system offset as constant over short time intervals, enabling the solution with only four satellites from mixed constellations. Another possible approach is to provide the users with the inter-system time-offset estimates. [7] describes the implementation of the GPS to Galileo Time Offset (GGTO), which is currently broadcast as part of the Galileo message, with an accuracy of 20 ns (95%, initial service target) [8]. However, as analyzed in [6], [9] and detailed in [10], different receivers have different impacts on the inter-system bias, being on the order of 20 ns and therefore comparable with GGTO [11]. This means that in order to exploit the broadcast estimate, inter-system biases due to the receiver must be calibrated or bounded. Discussion on this still open topic, and different possible approaches to address the receiver biases are presented, for example, in [8], [12], [13]. However, some test results show that in poor visibility conditions some users may benefit using the broadcast value of GGTO, even in presence of the intersystem bias due to the receiver effects [14]. \nWhile some users with limited satellite visibility may be able to estimate the inter-system bias and keep that estimate for the epoch when the visibility is poorer, some users may have such limited visibility to find this kind of approach unpractical. For instance, users in the high-altitude Space Service Volume (SSV), such as GEO and HEO satellites. This kind of users would possibly get high benefits from interoperable GNSS. Given the increasing number of applications related to the high-altitude SSV, there is a growing interest in providing those SSV users with PVT solution from GNSS [15-20]. Different approaches have been evaluated, including the opportunity of exploiting GNSS sidelobes signals [21], given that some missions, as for instance [22-23], demonstrated navigation performance in the high altuitude SSV exploiting the GNSS sidelobes that greatly exceed the expected performance [24]. How detailed in [24], these results are given to a combination of factor, including that the actual transmitted GPS power exceed the levels from specifications, even if in different ways in different satellite blocks, in particular [22], and that receiver technology allows to track very weak signals. However, transmissions from the antenna side lobes are totally excluded from performance specifications, in terms of power and errors. Therefore, an analysis of side-lobes measurements was conducted, detailed in [24]. As stated in [25], GPS is a critical infrastructure for space navigation, on which space users rely; however, space users are vulnerable to design changes, if service provider does not specify requirements on those performance. Following these guidelines, the Interface Specification document [26] specifies, for GPS block III, the SSV User-Received Signal Levels. However, only the signals main lobes are considered. \n\nHere, the analysis here has been conducted considering only the main lobes of the GNSS signals, considering the minimum performance in terms of main lobe beam-width and minimum radiated transmit power as specified in the performance standard documents, provided by the GNSS service providers and summarized in [27]. Different analyses have been performed to evaluate the availability of GNSS to those users [17], [28]. In this paper, an analysis has been conducted that considers not only the availability in terms of number of satellites in view given a desired received power, as in [28], but also the geometry and the resulting GDOP that a user in the SSV would experience with or without the provision of intersystem time-offset estimates. \n\nThe discussion about the user receiver calibration is not further detailed here. For this analysis, it is assumed that the user’s receiver has been calibrated, and has a residual bias small enough to satisfy the user’s requirements. This analysis have been performed in the framework of the Bobcat-1 project at Ohio University, to analyze a possible application of inter-constellation time-offsets estimates, which is one of the objectives of the Bobcat-1 project. Bobcat-1 is the first CubeSat being developed in the Avionics Engineering Center (AEC) at Ohio University, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) department, in Athens Ohio; Bobcat-1 has been selected for launch through the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative (CLI), and is expected to be launched in the third quarter of 2020. Figure 1 shows the CubeSat under development at Ohio University. The details of the CubeSat and the mission development are not the focus of this paper. \n\n\nThe primary objectives of Bobcat-1 are educational on one side, providing Ohio University graduate and undergraduate students with hands-on experience on a spacecraft, and scientific on the other side. The primary experiment that will be carried out by Bobcat1 is the feasibility and performance study of inter-constellation time-offset estimates from Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Given the growing applications of CubeSat technology, the interest on LEO measurements is growing and different studies have been conducted, as for instance [29]. After the analysis of high altitude SSV performance provided with estimates of inter-system time-offsets, in this paper a discussion is presented on the time-offsets estimate method, outlining methodology, challenges and calibration techniques.","PeriodicalId":315030,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the 2020 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-01-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"GNSS Inter-system Time-Offset Estimates and Impact on High Altitude SSV\",\"authors\":\"S. Ugazio, Brian C. Peters, Kevin Croissant, Gregory Jenkins, Ryan McKnight, F. 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So, if a single-constellation solution involves four unknowns, including the user’s spatial coordinates and the receiver time offset, a multi-system solution exploiting measurements from N_GNSS constellations involves 4 + N_GNSS^-1 unknows, where the additional N_GNSS^_1 unknows are the inter-system time offsets to be estimated. This means that in order to get an improvement with respect to a single-system solution, at least two satellites from any additional constellation must be in view. \\n\\nIn general, on-Earth users have enough satellites in view to get an improvement in GDOP thanks to a multi-GNSS solution. However, this is not always true when the user is in a low-visibility environment. In those cases, a multi-GNSS solution would ideally be beneficial, providing more satellites in view. On the other hand, the inter-system time-biases may constitute the bottle neck, and actually make the solution unavailable. Different approaches have been proposed to overcome this issue. The ICG-IGS Joint Trial Project (IGS-IGMA), led by the International Committee on GNSS (ICG) and the International GNSS Service (IGS), includes as long term objectives to “make all performance standard entries for each GNSS openly available” and to “provide a multi-GNSS service performance standard” [2]. The IGS Multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) [3-5] has, among its objectives to provide multi-GNSS products, exploit the IGS monitoring station network, and estimate biases and provide standards. In [6], different methods for the estimation of the inter-system biases are evaluated; the measurement model is constrained assuming the inter-system offset as constant over short time intervals, enabling the solution with only four satellites from mixed constellations. Another possible approach is to provide the users with the inter-system time-offset estimates. [7] describes the implementation of the GPS to Galileo Time Offset (GGTO), which is currently broadcast as part of the Galileo message, with an accuracy of 20 ns (95%, initial service target) [8]. However, as analyzed in [6], [9] and detailed in [10], different receivers have different impacts on the inter-system bias, being on the order of 20 ns and therefore comparable with GGTO [11]. This means that in order to exploit the broadcast estimate, inter-system biases due to the receiver must be calibrated or bounded. Discussion on this still open topic, and different possible approaches to address the receiver biases are presented, for example, in [8], [12], [13]. However, some test results show that in poor visibility conditions some users may benefit using the broadcast value of GGTO, even in presence of the intersystem bias due to the receiver effects [14]. \\nWhile some users with limited satellite visibility may be able to estimate the inter-system bias and keep that estimate for the epoch when the visibility is poorer, some users may have such limited visibility to find this kind of approach unpractical. For instance, users in the high-altitude Space Service Volume (SSV), such as GEO and HEO satellites. This kind of users would possibly get high benefits from interoperable GNSS. Given the increasing number of applications related to the high-altitude SSV, there is a growing interest in providing those SSV users with PVT solution from GNSS [15-20]. Different approaches have been evaluated, including the opportunity of exploiting GNSS sidelobes signals [21], given that some missions, as for instance [22-23], demonstrated navigation performance in the high altuitude SSV exploiting the GNSS sidelobes that greatly exceed the expected performance [24]. How detailed in [24], these results are given to a combination of factor, including that the actual transmitted GPS power exceed the levels from specifications, even if in different ways in different satellite blocks, in particular [22], and that receiver technology allows to track very weak signals. However, transmissions from the antenna side lobes are totally excluded from performance specifications, in terms of power and errors. Therefore, an analysis of side-lobes measurements was conducted, detailed in [24]. As stated in [25], GPS is a critical infrastructure for space navigation, on which space users rely; however, space users are vulnerable to design changes, if service provider does not specify requirements on those performance. Following these guidelines, the Interface Specification document [26] specifies, for GPS block III, the SSV User-Received Signal Levels. However, only the signals main lobes are considered. \\n\\nHere, the analysis here has been conducted considering only the main lobes of the GNSS signals, considering the minimum performance in terms of main lobe beam-width and minimum radiated transmit power as specified in the performance standard documents, provided by the GNSS service providers and summarized in [27]. Different analyses have been performed to evaluate the availability of GNSS to those users [17], [28]. In this paper, an analysis has been conducted that considers not only the availability in terms of number of satellites in view given a desired received power, as in [28], but also the geometry and the resulting GDOP that a user in the SSV would experience with or without the provision of intersystem time-offset estimates. \\n\\nThe discussion about the user receiver calibration is not further detailed here. For this analysis, it is assumed that the user’s receiver has been calibrated, and has a residual bias small enough to satisfy the user’s requirements. This analysis have been performed in the framework of the Bobcat-1 project at Ohio University, to analyze a possible application of inter-constellation time-offsets estimates, which is one of the objectives of the Bobcat-1 project. Bobcat-1 is the first CubeSat being developed in the Avionics Engineering Center (AEC) at Ohio University, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) department, in Athens Ohio; Bobcat-1 has been selected for launch through the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative (CLI), and is expected to be launched in the third quarter of 2020. Figure 1 shows the CubeSat under development at Ohio University. The details of the CubeSat and the mission development are not the focus of this paper. \\n\\n\\nThe primary objectives of Bobcat-1 are educational on one side, providing Ohio University graduate and undergraduate students with hands-on experience on a spacecraft, and scientific on the other side. The primary experiment that will be carried out by Bobcat1 is the feasibility and performance study of inter-constellation time-offset estimates from Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Given the growing applications of CubeSat technology, the interest on LEO measurements is growing and different studies have been conducted, as for instance [29]. 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引用次数: 4

摘要

全球导航卫星系统(gnss)的一个核心方面是它们用于运行的时间尺度。由于它们使用独立的时间尺度,因此在多星座解决方案和互操作性框架中,系统间时间偏移是需要考虑的最重要的偏差之一。在[1]中,提出了考虑GPS、伽利略、GLONASS和北斗的性能分析,显示了10到100 ns量级的系统间时间偏移。虽然多系统解决方案可以看到更多的卫星,并可能有更好的几何精度稀释(GDOP),但必须考虑到任何额外的星座都涉及额外的偏差。因此,如果单星座解决方案涉及4个未知数,包括用户空间坐标和接收机时间偏移,那么利用N_GNSS星座测量的多系统解决方案涉及4 + N_GNSS^-1个未知数,其中额外的N_GNSS^_1个未知数是要估计的系统间时间偏移。这意味着,为了获得相对于单系统解决方案的改进,任何额外星座的至少两颗卫星必须在视线范围内。一般来说,由于多gnss解决方案,地球上的用户有足够的卫星来提高GDOP。然而,当用户处于低可见性环境中时,这并不总是正确的。在这些情况下,理想情况下,多gnss解决方案将是有益的,可以提供更多的卫星。另一方面,系统间的时间偏差可能构成瓶颈,实际上使解决方案不可用。已经提出了不同的方法来克服这个问题。由国际GNSS委员会(ICG)和国际GNSS服务(IGS)领导的ICG-IGS联合试验项目(IGS- igma)的长期目标包括“公开提供每个GNSS的所有性能标准条目”和“提供多GNSS服务性能标准”[2]。IGS多gnss实验(MGEX)[3-5]的目标之一是提供多gnss产品,利用IGS监测站网络,估计偏差并提供标准。在[6]中,评估了估算系统间偏差的不同方法;该测量模型假定系统间的偏移量在短时间间隔内是恒定的,这使得只有来自混合星座的四颗卫星的解决方案成为可能。另一种可能的方法是向用户提供系统间时间偏移估计。[7]描述了GPS到伽利略时间偏移(GGTO)的实现,它目前作为伽利略消息的一部分广播,精度为20 ns(95%,初始服务目标)[8]。然而,如[6]、[9]所分析,并在[10]中详细介绍,不同的接收机对系统间偏倚的影响不同,大约在20 ns量级,因此与GGTO具有可比性[11]。这意味着,为了利用广播估计,由于接收机的系统间偏差必须被校准或限制。关于这个仍然开放的话题的讨论,并提出了不同的可能的方法来解决接受者偏见,例如,在[8],[12],[13]中。然而,一些测试结果表明,在能见度较差的条件下,即使存在由于接收器影响而产生的系统间偏差,一些用户也可能受益于GGTO的广播值[14]。虽然一些卫星能见度有限的用户可能能够估计出系统间偏差,并在能见度较差时保留该估计,但一些用户可能由于能见度有限而发现这种方法不实用。例如,高空空间业务量(SSV)中的用户,如GEO和HEO卫星。这类用户可能会从可互操作的GNSS中获得很高的收益。鉴于与高空SSV相关的应用越来越多,为这些SSV用户提供来自GNSS的PVT解决方案的兴趣越来越大[15-20]。已经评估了不同的方法,包括利用GNSS副瓣信号的机会[21],因为一些任务,例如[22-23],在利用GNSS副瓣的高海拔SSV中显示了大大超过预期性能的导航性能[24]。在[24]中,这些结果是由多种因素综合而成的,包括实际发射的GPS功率超过了规范规定的水平,特别是[22],即使在不同的卫星块中以不同的方式,接收器技术允许跟踪非常微弱的信号。然而,在功率和误差方面,天线侧瓣的传输完全排除在性能规格之外。因此,对旁瓣测量进行了分析,详见[24]。 如[25]所述,GPS是空间导航的关键基础设施,是空间用户所依赖的;但是,如果服务提供商没有明确规定对这些性能的要求,空间用户很容易受到设计变更的影响。遵循这些准则,接口规范文档[26]规定了GPS block III的SSV用户接收信号电平。然而,只考虑信号的主叶。这里的分析只考虑了GNSS信号的主瓣,考虑了GNSS服务提供商提供的性能标准文件中规定的主瓣波束宽度和最小辐射发射功率的最小性能,并在[27]中进行了总结。已经进行了不同的分析来评估GNSS对这些用户的可用性[17],[28]。在本文中,已经进行了一项分析,该分析不仅考虑了在给定期望接收功率的情况下卫星数量的可用性,如[28],还考虑了SSV中的用户在提供或不提供系统间时间偏移估计的情况下所经历的几何形状和由此产生的GDOP。关于用户接收机校准的讨论在此不作进一步详细说明。对于此分析,假设用户的接收器已经过校准,并且具有足够小的残余偏差以满足用户的要求。该分析是在俄亥俄大学山猫1号项目的框架内进行的,目的是分析星座间时间偏移估计的可能应用,这是山猫1号项目的目标之一。山猫-1是位于俄亥俄州雅典的俄亥俄大学电子工程与计算机科学系航空电子工程中心(AEC)开发的第一颗立方体卫星;山猫1号通过美国宇航局立方体卫星发射计划(CLI)被选中发射,预计将于2020年第三季度发射。图1显示了俄亥俄大学正在开发的CubeSat。立方体卫星的细节和任务发展不是本文的重点。山猫一号的主要目标一方面是教育,为俄亥俄大学的研究生和本科生提供在航天器上的实践经验,另一方面是科学。Bobcat1将进行的主要实验是低地球轨道(LEO)星座间时间偏移估计的可行性和性能研究。鉴于CubeSat技术的应用越来越多,人们对近地轨道测量的兴趣也在增长,并开展了不同的研究,例如[29]。在分析了提供系统间时间偏移估计的高空SSV性能后,本文讨论了时间偏移估计方法,概述了方法,挑战和校准技术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
GNSS Inter-system Time-Offset Estimates and Impact on High Altitude SSV
INTRODUCTION A core aspect of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) is the time scale they use to operate. Since they use independent time scales, inter-system time-offsets are one of the most significant biases to be taken into account in a multi-constellation solution, and in the framework of interoperability. In [1] a performance analysis is presented considering GPS, Galileo, GLONASS and BeiDou, showing inter-system time-offsets on the order of 10 to 100 ns. While a multi-system solution enables more satellites in view and possibly a better Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP), it must be taken into account that any additional constellation involves an additional bias. So, if a single-constellation solution involves four unknowns, including the user’s spatial coordinates and the receiver time offset, a multi-system solution exploiting measurements from N_GNSS constellations involves 4 + N_GNSS^-1 unknows, where the additional N_GNSS^_1 unknows are the inter-system time offsets to be estimated. This means that in order to get an improvement with respect to a single-system solution, at least two satellites from any additional constellation must be in view. In general, on-Earth users have enough satellites in view to get an improvement in GDOP thanks to a multi-GNSS solution. However, this is not always true when the user is in a low-visibility environment. In those cases, a multi-GNSS solution would ideally be beneficial, providing more satellites in view. On the other hand, the inter-system time-biases may constitute the bottle neck, and actually make the solution unavailable. Different approaches have been proposed to overcome this issue. The ICG-IGS Joint Trial Project (IGS-IGMA), led by the International Committee on GNSS (ICG) and the International GNSS Service (IGS), includes as long term objectives to “make all performance standard entries for each GNSS openly available” and to “provide a multi-GNSS service performance standard” [2]. The IGS Multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) [3-5] has, among its objectives to provide multi-GNSS products, exploit the IGS monitoring station network, and estimate biases and provide standards. In [6], different methods for the estimation of the inter-system biases are evaluated; the measurement model is constrained assuming the inter-system offset as constant over short time intervals, enabling the solution with only four satellites from mixed constellations. Another possible approach is to provide the users with the inter-system time-offset estimates. [7] describes the implementation of the GPS to Galileo Time Offset (GGTO), which is currently broadcast as part of the Galileo message, with an accuracy of 20 ns (95%, initial service target) [8]. However, as analyzed in [6], [9] and detailed in [10], different receivers have different impacts on the inter-system bias, being on the order of 20 ns and therefore comparable with GGTO [11]. This means that in order to exploit the broadcast estimate, inter-system biases due to the receiver must be calibrated or bounded. Discussion on this still open topic, and different possible approaches to address the receiver biases are presented, for example, in [8], [12], [13]. However, some test results show that in poor visibility conditions some users may benefit using the broadcast value of GGTO, even in presence of the intersystem bias due to the receiver effects [14]. While some users with limited satellite visibility may be able to estimate the inter-system bias and keep that estimate for the epoch when the visibility is poorer, some users may have such limited visibility to find this kind of approach unpractical. For instance, users in the high-altitude Space Service Volume (SSV), such as GEO and HEO satellites. This kind of users would possibly get high benefits from interoperable GNSS. Given the increasing number of applications related to the high-altitude SSV, there is a growing interest in providing those SSV users with PVT solution from GNSS [15-20]. Different approaches have been evaluated, including the opportunity of exploiting GNSS sidelobes signals [21], given that some missions, as for instance [22-23], demonstrated navigation performance in the high altuitude SSV exploiting the GNSS sidelobes that greatly exceed the expected performance [24]. How detailed in [24], these results are given to a combination of factor, including that the actual transmitted GPS power exceed the levels from specifications, even if in different ways in different satellite blocks, in particular [22], and that receiver technology allows to track very weak signals. However, transmissions from the antenna side lobes are totally excluded from performance specifications, in terms of power and errors. Therefore, an analysis of side-lobes measurements was conducted, detailed in [24]. As stated in [25], GPS is a critical infrastructure for space navigation, on which space users rely; however, space users are vulnerable to design changes, if service provider does not specify requirements on those performance. Following these guidelines, the Interface Specification document [26] specifies, for GPS block III, the SSV User-Received Signal Levels. However, only the signals main lobes are considered. Here, the analysis here has been conducted considering only the main lobes of the GNSS signals, considering the minimum performance in terms of main lobe beam-width and minimum radiated transmit power as specified in the performance standard documents, provided by the GNSS service providers and summarized in [27]. Different analyses have been performed to evaluate the availability of GNSS to those users [17], [28]. In this paper, an analysis has been conducted that considers not only the availability in terms of number of satellites in view given a desired received power, as in [28], but also the geometry and the resulting GDOP that a user in the SSV would experience with or without the provision of intersystem time-offset estimates. The discussion about the user receiver calibration is not further detailed here. For this analysis, it is assumed that the user’s receiver has been calibrated, and has a residual bias small enough to satisfy the user’s requirements. This analysis have been performed in the framework of the Bobcat-1 project at Ohio University, to analyze a possible application of inter-constellation time-offsets estimates, which is one of the objectives of the Bobcat-1 project. Bobcat-1 is the first CubeSat being developed in the Avionics Engineering Center (AEC) at Ohio University, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) department, in Athens Ohio; Bobcat-1 has been selected for launch through the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative (CLI), and is expected to be launched in the third quarter of 2020. Figure 1 shows the CubeSat under development at Ohio University. The details of the CubeSat and the mission development are not the focus of this paper. The primary objectives of Bobcat-1 are educational on one side, providing Ohio University graduate and undergraduate students with hands-on experience on a spacecraft, and scientific on the other side. The primary experiment that will be carried out by Bobcat1 is the feasibility and performance study of inter-constellation time-offset estimates from Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Given the growing applications of CubeSat technology, the interest on LEO measurements is growing and different studies have been conducted, as for instance [29]. After the analysis of high altitude SSV performance provided with estimates of inter-system time-offsets, in this paper a discussion is presented on the time-offsets estimate method, outlining methodology, challenges and calibration techniques.
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