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Efficient high-rate satellite clock estimation for PPP ambiguity resolution using carrier-ranges.
Chen, Hua; Jiang, Weiping; Ge, Maorong; Wickert, Jens; Schuh, Harald.
Affiliation
  • Chen H; School of Geodesy and Geomatics, Wuhan University, 129 Luoyu Road, Wuhan 430079, China. whuchenhua@gmail.com.
  • Jiang W; School of Geodesy and Geomatics, Wuhan University, 129 Luoyu Road, Wuhan 430079, China. wpjiang@whu.edu.cn.
  • Ge M; German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ), Telegrafenberg, Potsdam 14473, Germany. maor@gfz-potsdam.de.
  • Wickert J; German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ), Telegrafenberg, Potsdam 14473, Germany. wickert@gfz-potsdam.de.
  • Schuh H; German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ), Telegrafenberg, Potsdam 14473, Germany. schuh@gfz-potsdam.de.
Sensors (Basel) ; 14(12): 22300-12, 2014 Nov 25.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25429413
ABSTRACT
In order to catch up the short-term clock variation of GNSS satellites, clock corrections must be estimated and updated at a high-rate for Precise Point Positioning (PPP). This estimation is already very time-consuming for the GPS constellation only as a great number of ambiguities need to be simultaneously estimated. However, on the one hand better estimates are expected by including more stations, and on the other hand satellites from different GNSS systems must be processed integratively for a reliable multi-GNSS positioning service. To alleviate the heavy computational burden, epoch-differenced observations are always employed where ambiguities are eliminated. As the epoch-differenced method can only derive temporal clock changes which have to be aligned to the absolute clocks but always in a rather complicated way, in this paper, an efficient method for high-rate clock estimation is proposed using the concept of "carrier-range" realized by means of PPP with integer ambiguity resolution. Processing procedures for both post- and real-time processing are developed, respectively. The experimental validation shows that the computation time could be reduced to about one sixth of that of the existing methods for post-processing and less than 1 s for processing a single epoch of a network with about 200 stations in real-time mode after all ambiguities are fixed. This confirms that the proposed processing strategy will enable the high-rate clock estimation for future multi-GNSS networks in post-processing and possibly also in real-time mode.