1,848 research outputs found

    Robust Positioning in the Presence of Multipath and NLOS GNSS Signals

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    GNSS signals can be blocked and reflected by nearby objects, such as buildings, walls, and vehicles. They can also be reflected by the ground and by water. These effects are the dominant source of GNSS positioning errors in dense urban environments, though they can have an impact almost anywhere. Non- line-of-sight (NLOS) reception occurs when the direct path from the transmitter to the receiver is blocked and signals are received only via a reflected path. Multipath interference occurs, as the name suggests, when a signal is received via multiple paths. This can be via the direct path and one or more reflected paths, or it can be via multiple reflected paths. As their error characteristics are different, NLOS and multipath interference typically require different mitigation techniques, though some techniques are applicable to both. Antenna design and advanced receiver signal processing techniques can substantially reduce multipath errors. Unless an antenna array is used, NLOS reception has to be detected using the receiver's ranging and carrier-power-to-noise-density ratio (C/N0) measurements and mitigated within the positioning algorithm. Some NLOS mitigation techniques can also be used to combat severe multipath interference. Multipath interference, but not NLOS reception, can also be mitigated by comparing or combining code and carrier measurements, comparing ranging and C/N0 measurements from signals on different frequencies, and analyzing the time evolution of the ranging and C/N0 measurements

    Novel multipath mitigation methods using a dual-polarization antenna

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    There are many methods for mitigating GNSS multipath errors. However, none of them completely eliminate the effects of multipath or suit all GNSS applications. A new class of multipath mitigation methods exploit new dual-polarization antenna technology. GNSS signals received direct from the satellites have right-handed circular polarization (RHCP), whereas (singly) reflected signals have left-handed circular polarization (LHCP) or an elliptical polarization that may be expressed as the sum of RHCP and LHCP components. Conventional GNSS user antennas are more sensitive to signals with RHCP, attenuating LHCP signals and reducing, but not eliminating, the multipath errors in the receiver. An antenna with the opposite polarization sensitivity will attenuate the direct signals more than the reflected signals. This can be used to characterizing the reflected signals and thus mitigate the effects of multipath interference.Experimental work using an Antcom dual-polarization antenna and dual geodetic receivers is presented. This verifies that carrier power to noise density, C/N-0, measurements obtained by separately correlating the RHCP and LHCP antenna outputs can be used to distinguish between a low-multipath and moderate-multipath environment. This may be used as the basis of a multipath detection technique.Three different multipath mitigation techniques that use a dual-polarization antenna are proposed. Measurement weighting estimates the code and carrier multipath error standard deviation from the RHCP-LHCP C/N-0 difference and elevation angle. This is used by the navigation processor to discard and reweight measurements. Range-domain multipath correction, uses the pseudo-range, carrier-phase and C/N-0 differences between the outputs of RHCP and LHCP receiver tracking channels, together with antenna calibration data, to estimate corrections to the code and carrier measurements. In tracking-domain multipath mitigation, the RHCP and LHCP correlator outputs are input to common acquisition and tracking algorithms which attempt to separate the direct line of sight and reflected signalsThe design of a novel dual-input GNSS front end, based on direct RF sampling, is presented This will be used, in conjunction with a software GNSS receiver, for future development and testing of multipath mitigation using a dual-polarization antenna

    GNSS Signal Authentication via Power and Distortion Monitoring

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    We propose a simple low-cost technique that enables civil Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers and other civil global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receivers to reliably detect carry-off spoofing and jamming. The technique, which we call the Power-Distortion detector, classifies received signals as interference-free, multipath-afflicted, spoofed, or jammed according to observations of received power and correlatio n function distortion. It does not depend on external hardware or a network connection and can be readily implemented on many receivers via a firmware update. Crucially, the detector can with high probability distinguish low-power spoofing from ordinary multipath. In testing against over 25 high-quality empirical data sets yielding over 900,000 separate detection tests, the detector correctly alarms on all malicious spoofing or jamming attack s while maintaining a <0.5% single-channel false alarm rate.Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanic

    NLOS GPS signal detection using a dual-polarisation antenna

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    The reception of indirect signals, either in the form of non-line-of-sight (NLOS) reception or multipath interference, is a major cause of GNSS position errors in urban environments. We explore the potential of using dual-polarisation antenna technology for detecting and mitigating the reception of NLOS signals and severe multipath interference. The new technique computes the value of the carrier-power-to-noise-density (C/N0) measurements from left-hand circular polarised outputs subtracted from the right-hand circular polarised C/N0 counterpart. If this quality is negative, NLOS signal reception is assumed. If the C/N0 difference is positive, but falls below a threshold based on its lower bound in an open-sky environment, severe multipath interference is assumed. Results from two experiments are presented. Open-field testing was first performed to characterise the antenna behaviour and determine a suitable multipath detection threshold. The techniques were then tested in a dense urban area. Using the new method, two signals in the urban data were identified as NLOS-only reception during the occupation period at one station, while the majority of the remaining signals present were subject to a mixture of NLOS reception and severe multipath interference. The point positioning results were dramatically improved by excluding the detected NLOS measurements. The new technique is suited to a wide range of static ground applications based on our results

    Spacecraft applications of advanced global positioning system technology

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    The purpose of this study was to evaluate potential uses of Global Positioning System (GPS) in spacecraft applications in the following areas: attitude control and tracking; structural control; traffic control; and time base definition (synchronization). Each of these functions are addressed. Also addressed are the hardware related issues concerning the application of GPS technology and comparisons are provided with alternative instrumentation methods for specific functions required for an advanced low earth orbit spacecraft
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