SimActive Inc., a developer of photogrammetry software, has launched an automated solution for direct georeferencing from real-time kinematic (RTK) positioning.
Within the new workflow feature, users can achieve get high accuracy in projects without the use of ground control points (GCP), saving time in collecting and processing data.
Martin Instrument, a reseller of SimActive and surveying equipment, is benefitting from the automation. “Direct georeferencing greatly helps reducing cost for applications like corridor mapping,” said Mike Minick, vice president of sales at Martin Instrument. “The new automated option within SimActive software for direct georeferencing greatly facilitates the user workflow.”
“With RTK GPS available on drones, the use of direct georeferencing is growing within the industry,” said Louis Simard, CTO of SimActive. “Correlator3D allows users to maximize their hardware and software investment.”
For a live demonstration at the Commercial UAV Show (Nov. 15-16, London, United Kingdom), visit SimActive’s booth or send an email to [email protected].
Septentrio debuted the AsteRx-m2a and AsteRx-m2a UAS GNSS OEM engines at Commercial UAV 2017, held Oct. 24-26 in Las Vegas.
The two new OEM boards provide precise and reliable multi-frequency, all-in-view real-time kinematic (RTK) positioning and heading — along with interference technology — with low power consumption, the company said.
Both boards are smaller than a credit card and feature Septentrio’s AIM+ interference mitigation and monitoring system. AIM+ can suppress a wide variety of interferers, from simple continuous narrowband signals to the most complex wideband and pulsed jammers.
The AsteRx-m2a board by Septentrio. Photo: Septentrio
Increasing levels of radio-frequency pollution, coupled with the intrinsic danger of self-interference in compact systems such as UAS, makes interference mitigation a vital element in any UAS system that uses GNSS positioning.
Both boards are designed to bring high-precision positioning and attitude to any space-constrained application. According to the company, both receivers are designed to serve as core components in any multi-sensor application.
The AsteRx-m2a UAS is aimed specifically at unmanned applications, bringing plug-and-play compatibility for autopilot systems such as ArduPilot and Pixhawk. Event markers accurately synchronize camera shutter events with GNSS time. The board can be powered directly from the vehicle power bus via its wide-range input.
The AsteRx-m2 UAS board by Septentrio. Photo: Septentrio
The AsteRx-m2a UAS works seamlessly with GeoTagZ software, providing offline re-processed RTK accuracy without the need for either ground control points or a real-time datalink.
“We’ve taken the hugely successful AsteRx-m2 and added a second antenna input for high-precision GNSS heading,” said Gustavo Lopez, OEM product manager at Septentrio. “No need to manoeuvre around in a figure of ‘8’ trying to initialise INS heading or find space or additional power for a separate INS module now. All you need is a second antenna and you’re good to go.”
Septentrio is located at booth 206 of Commercial UAV Expo 2017.
Harxon is showcasing a series of GNSS antennas and wireless data-link modems at 2017 Intergeo, being held Sept. 26-28 in Berlin, Germany.
The products aim to provide the user better industrial solutions in the fields of surveying and mapping, precision agriculture and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).
The Harxon D-Helix Antenna.
D-Helix Antenna: The multi constellation antenna is capable of superior tracking signals from 4 satellite constellations, including GPS L1/L2 L-Band, GLONASS L1/L2, BDS B1/B2/B3 and Galileo. The innovative quadrifilar helix antenna design of low wind-resistance is ideal for aerial photographs, telemetry technology, disaster monitoring and security monitoring industries. Its 3.5dBi peak gain ensures exceptional low elevation tracking performance. The low noise figure enhanced transmission interference reduction and improve the signal quality.
The Harxon GPS 1000 Survey Antenna.
Survey Antenna GPS 1000: The all constellation GNSS antenna has passed the NGS certification, which receives GPS L1/L2/L5 L-Band, BDS B1/B2/B3, GLONASS L1/L2, Galileo E1/E2/E5a/E5b signals. It can be used in land survey, marine survey, channel survey and agriculture applications, with a consistent performance across the full bandwidth. GPS 1000 has high gain and wide beam width to ensure the signal receiving performance of satellite at the low elevation angle, and the phase center remains constant as the azimuth and elevation angle of the satellites change. The influence of measurement error can be minimized via the multi-feed design and embedded multi-path rejection board.
Rover Radio HX-DU1603D: The high-speed, Bluetooth-enabled ruggedized UHF rover radio is designed for GNSS/RTK surveying and positioning. It ensures the data communication between 410MHz and 470 MHz in either 12.5KHz or 25 KHz channels. HX-DU1603D is equipped with a Bluetooth transceiver for wireless communications of external devices, features a 6800mAh rechargeable internal battery and configurable transmit power between 0.5W and 2W, also the IP67 waterproof capability allows outdoor long operational hours.
Harxon Frequency Hopping Module HX-DU1018D/HX-DU2017D.
Frequency Hopping Module HX-DU1018D/HX-DU2017D: The built-in frequency hopping transceiver modules are small size, light weight, low power consumption and strong resistance to disturbance. They provide a reliable, high speed and low latency data transmission, which are suitable for UAV flight control. These modules support a band range among 400MHz, 840MHz and 900MHz and long distance of communication. Besides, HX-DU1018D/HX-DU2017D can realize a switchover between air baud rate and serial port baud rate.
Harxon Smart Antenna.
Smart Antenna: It is a multi-functional GNSS product which is integrated by multi-frequency OEM antenna, OEM receiver and frequency hopping transceiver. Smart Antenna utilizes the dual anti-multipath antenna to receive stable GNSS signals under the bad-signal environment and precisely output the direct information with a centimeter-level positioning accuracy. The IP67 waterproof design allows the smart antenna for a long time outdoor operation.
The Harxon H-RTK.
H-RTK: H-RTK is for UAV positioning and navigation, which reaches the positioning accuracy to a centimeter level. It is integrated with positioning, height setting and heading functions to provide accurate, reliable solutions. H-RTK ensures the positioning accuracy to a centimeter level for a more stable flightpath. Also, it provides the reliable height information and solve the height-error problem to prevent air turbulence. H-RTK outputs precise navigation information with powerful magnetic disturbance resistance, it enables the flight reliability under a magnetic disturbance environment, and avoid security risks. The built-in anti-interference frequency hopping transceiver helps data transfer back to the base station, and supports the frequencies of 400 MHz, 840 MHz and 900 MHz.
For more information,visit Harxon’s booth at Intergeo in Hall 4.1 booth C4.013.
Tersus GNSS Inc. has released a major upgrade to its Precis-BX306 RTK board with new and improved GPS/GLONASS functionality. Tersus GNSS is a manufacturer of high-precision GNSS real-time kinematic (RTK) boards, receivers and systems.
Precis-BX306 Board Easy Kit.
The new version of Precis-BX306 supports up to 20-Hz RTK solution and raw measurement output, which can be integrated with autopilots and inertial navigation units.
With improved algorithms, the new Precis-BX306 demonstrates its ability that the 30-km baseline can be fixed quickly, the company said.
Moreover, the dynamic fix rate shows an advantage comparing to the majority of competitive solutions. Stable fix rate is achieved when it is working under city valley, tree, and other challenging environment.
“The technology changes made in this version give a whole new user experience for our customers,” said Xiaohua Wen, founder and CEO. “With the updated capabilities, the Precis-BX306 is particularly useful for drones, surveyors and geographic information system data users interested in an affordable RTK solution.”
This latest version of Precis-BX306 is pin-to-pin compatible with major GNSS boards in the market, offering a flexible interface. Event mark and PPS are supported as always. All enhanced features demonstrate Tersus’ commitment to the needs of customers who value dynamic accuracy and stability.
The new Precis-BX306 is available for order and delivery immediately, and it will be shown at Intergeo in Berlin, Germany, Sept. 26-28.
Unicore has launched its next-generation quad-system GNSS module, the UM482.
The UM482 is a multi-frequency high-precision heading module with a small footprint, supporting the satellite signals BDS B1/B2, GPS L1/L2, GLONASS L1/L2, Galileo E1/ E5b and SBAS.
The module is designed for applications such as robotics, drones, intelligent drives and mechanical control.
1-cm RTK positioning accuracy and 0.2-degree heading accuracy with 1-m baseline
Dual antenna input with support of antenna signal detection
Supporting simultaneous output of heading and positioning, 20-Hz data output rate
Adaptive recognition of RTCM input data format
On-board micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS) integrated navigation
The UM482 GNSS RTK module adopts Unicore’s new-generation Nebulas II chip and UGypsophila real-time kinematic (RTK) algorithm.
Based on high performance data-sharing technology and the simplified operation system of the Nebulas II chip, the UGypsophila RTK algorithm dramatically optimizes matrix processing, the company said. It can involve all satellites from GPS, BDS, GLONASS and Galileo in RTK and heading processing, shorten RTK and heading initialization time to 5 seconds and significantly improve the reliability and accuracy of RTK and heading.
Furthermore, the UM482 integrates the onboard MEMS chip and U-Fusion integrated navigation algorithm, resulting in optimized continuity and reliability of accurate heading and positioning output in tough environments such as city canyons, tunnels and overpasses. Inputs of odometer and external higher performance inertial components are supported.
The UM482, along with all the UM and UB family of receivers, will be on display at booth B4018 for the duration of the Intergeo 2017 trade show, which takes place Sept. 26-28 at Berlin Exhibition Center, Berlin, Germany.
Tersus GNSS Inc. has released a new AutoSteer autopilot for agricultural machinery.
The AG960 AutoSteer System is designed to accelerate the application of autopilot for precision agricultural machinery and enhance and optimize operational accuracy and productivity for modern farmers.
By integrating high-precision real-time kinematic (RTK) receiver and software, the AG960 enables agricultural machines to operate in accordance with a pre-set planning path. Using precise GNSS guidance, the hydraulic system of the agricultural machinery is steered by the vehicle controller.
Agricultural machines can operate aligned with the set route automatically, while graphical detailsare displayed on the vehicle display panel. The system is easy to use and applicable for each working cycle of agriculture, such as soil tillage, plowing, building of ditches and ridges, seeding, spraying and harvesting.
Tersus plans to launch a series of solutions that meet the requirements of different farming machines. The AG960 was first commercially deployed in China, and will be rolled out in other regions around the world.
Even a GNSS receiver that can supply raw pseudorange and carrier-phase measurements now costs only a few hundred dollars, and in this month’s column, a couple of researchers from Down Under pit a couple of these receivers up against a couple of survey-grade receivers. Did this cheap receiver turn out to be a good thing?
By Robert Odolinski and Peter J.G. Teunissen
ALL GOOD THINGS ARE CHEAP; ALL BAD ARE VERY DEAR. That’s what the famous American essayist (and surveyor) Henry David Thoreau wrote in his diary on March 3, 1841. He was likely referring, in part, to the cheapness of the things he came across in nature such as birdsong or the plants and trees on the shores of Walden Pond and the dearness of some luxuries and comforts of civilization, which he tended to eschew. But what has that got to do with GPS, you might ask?
When they were first introduced in the late 1970s and early 1980s, GPS receivers were very dear. Many of them sold for anywhere from $50,000 to $250,000, which would be equivalent to about twice those amounts in today’s dollars. The first civilian receivers were large bulky affairs. As I documented in this column in April 1990 (“Smaller and Smaller: The Evolution of the GPS Receiver”), the “first commercially available GPS receiver was the STI-5010 built by Stanford Telecommunications Inc. It was a dual-frequency, C/A- and P-code, slow-sequencing receiver. Cycling through four satellites took about five minutes, and the receiver unit alone required about 30 centimeters of rack space. External counters, also requiring rack space, made pseudorange measurements. An external computer controlled the receiver and computed positions.” While it could be transported in a small truck (and some were), it was not designed for portability and ease of use by surveyors or geodesists.
Then, in 1982, Texas Instruments introduced the first relatively compact civil GPS receiver, the TI 4100, also known as the Navstar Navigator. And as I also noted in that column more than 15 years ago, this “receiver could make both C/A- and P-code measurements along with carrier-phase measurements on both L1 and L2 frequencies. Its single hardware channel could track four satellites simultaneously through a multiplexing arrangement. The 37 × 45 × 21-centimeter receiver/processor had a handheld control and display unit and an optional dual-cassette data recorder for saving measurements for post-processing. The unit, although portable, weighed 25 kilograms and consumed 110 watts of power (the receiver doubled as a hand warmer). Field operation required a supply of automobile batteries.”
My, how things have changed. Beginning around 1990, receivers steadily got smaller and smaller and cheaper and cheaper. Survey-grade GNSS (not just GPS) receivers can now be purchased for well under $10,000 and consumer-grade units sell for as little as a hundred dollars or less. And, of course, the GNSS modules inside smartphones and other devices cost manufacturers only a couple of dollars or so.
But even a GNSS receiver that can supply raw pseudorange and carrier-phase measurements now costs only a few hundred dollars, and in this month’s column, a couple of researchers from Down Under pit a couple of these receivers up against a couple of survey-grade receivers. Did this cheap receiver turn out to be a good thing?
Read on to find out.
GPS has been the number-one positioning tool for a range of applications during the past few decades. The integration of the emerging global navigation satellite systems, such as the Chinese BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS), can give improved precise (millimeter- to centimeter-level) real-time kinematic (RTK) positioning. When BDS is combined with GPS, about double the number of satellites are visible in the Asia-Pacific region, which can make single-frequency RTK and low-cost receiver RTK positioning possible.
In this article, we will analyze the performance of L1 GPS + B1 BDS in Dunedin, New Zealand, using low-cost receivers. We compare their performance to that of L1+L2 GPS survey-grade receivers.
First, we describe the GPS+BDS functional and stochastic models and the data used for our evaluations. Least-squares variance component estimation (LS-VCE) is used as a means to determine the code and phase (co)variances to formulate a realistic stochastic model. (An incorrect stochastic model will deteriorate the ambiguity resolution and consequently the achievable positioning precisions.)
Having correctly defined the stochastic model, we focus on the positioning performance. We investigated the ambiguity resolution and positioning performance, both formally and empirically, for customary and high-elevation cut-off angles. The high cut-off angles are used to mimic situations when low-elevation multipath is to be avoided. Lastly, we compared all our results between using low-cost and survey-grade antennas.
GPS+BDS POSITIONING MODEL
The model that we used for positioning is given as follows. Assume that sG + 1 GPS satellites are tracked on fG frequencies and sB + 1 BDS satellites on fB frequencies. As we apply system-specific double-differencing (DD), one pivot satellite is used per system. The total number of DD phase and code observations per epoch then equals 2 fGsG + 2 fBsB. We assume for now that cross-correlation between frequencies as well as code and phase is absent. The combined multi-frequency short-baseline GPS+BDS model is then defined as follows.
The system-specific DD phase and code observation vectors are denoted as φ* and p*, respectively, with * = {G, B} where G = GPS and B = BDS. The single-epoch GNSS model of the combined system is given as
(1)
and
(2)
in which
is the combined phase vector,
is the combined code vector,
is the combined integer ambiguity vector,
is the real-valued baseline vector,
is the combined phase random observation noise vector,
is the combined code random observation noise vector, and
D[.] denotes the dispersion operator.
The entries of the baseline design and wavelength matrices are given as
where is the x 1 vector of 1s, is the differencing matrix, is the unit matrix, the geometry-matrices GG and GB contain the undifferenced receiver-satellite unit direction vectors for GPS and BDS, respectively, is the wavelength of frequency , denotes the Kronecker product, and “diag” and “blkdiag” indicate diagonal and block diagonal matrices, respectively. The entries of the positive definite variance matrices are given as
(3)
where , denote the phase and code standard deviation, respectively, and the satellite elevation-angle-dependent weight.
The model in Equation 1 applies to short baselines, and thus the ionospheric and tropospheric delays are assumed absent. The broadcast ephemerides are used to obtain the satellite coordinates. Further, the Least-squares AMBiguity Decorrelation Adjustment (LAMBDA) technique is used to estimate the integer ambiguities a. The observation noise vectors εand e, respectively, are zero-mean vectors, provided that no multipath is present in Equation 1.
EXPERIMENT SETUP
The GNSS receivers we used are depicted in FIGURE 1. Firstly, two low-cost single-frequency receivers were set up to collect L1+B1 GPS+BDS data for two days. These receivers cost a few hundred U.S. dollars. Since the patch antennas we used have been shown to have less effective signal reception and multipath suppression in comparison to survey-grade antennas, the receivers that collected data for two days were additionally connected to such antennas. These antennas have a cost of slightly more than US$1,000 per antenna. To compare the low-cost solution to a survey-grade receiver-solution, two such receivers (which cost several thousand U.S. dollars) were connected to the same survey-grade antennas through splitters and collected L1+L2 GPS data. A detection, identification and adaption procedure was used to eliminate any outliers.
FIGURE 1. Low-cost single-frequency receivers collecting GPS+BDS data for single-baseline RTK, with patch antennas (left) and survey-grade antennas (right) on Jan. 4–6 and Jan. 6–8, 2016, respectively. Survey-grade dual- frequency GPS receivers were connected to the same survey-grade antennas simultaneously to truly track the same GPS constellation.
FIGURE 2 depicts the corresponding redundancy of the two receiver models (that is, the number of observations minus the number of estimated unknowns) together with the number of satellites over 48 hours (30-second epoch interval). The number of BDS satellites (magenta lines) is overall smaller than when compared to GPS (blue lines) in Dunedin. However, Figure 2 also shows that the model strength of L1+B1 GPS+BDS, as measured by its redundancy, is almost similar to that of L1+L2 GPS except for some hours at the middle of the two days. This implies that the two receiver models can potentially give competitive RTK ambiguity resolution and positioning performance. This is however only true if the receiver code and phase observation noise would be of similar magnitude between the receivers used, hence the need for an analysis of the receiver observation precision.
FIGURE 2. Redundancy (left) and number of satellites (right) of L1+B1 GPS+BDS and L1+L2 GPS during Jan. 6–8, 2016, (48 hours) for an elevation cut-off angle of 10°.
In our receiver evaluations, we determined a set of reference ambiguities by using a known baseline and treating them as time-constant parameters over the two days in a dynamic model.
LOW-COST RTK POSITIONING
The code and phase variances were estimated by LS-VCE using data independent from the data used for the following positioning analysis. The variances are needed to formulate a realistic stochastic model, whereas an incorrect stochastic model will deteriorate the ambiguity resolution and consequently the achievable positioning precisions. TABLE 1 depicts the corresponding estimated standard deviations (STDs) used for our positioning models.
TAB LE 1. Zenith-referenced undifferenced code and phase standard deviations estimated by least-squares variance component estimation.
Table 1 shows that the code precision of L1 GPS and B1 BDS improves significantly when the survey-grade antennas are used instead of patch antennas (49 centimeters STD for L1/B1 that decreases to about 30 centimeters), due to their better signal reception and multipath suppression abilities. For testing our stochastic model, we used data that is independent from the data used to estimate the code/phase precision.
Positioning Performance. The single-epoch (instantaneous) RTK positioning results for 24 hours data are shown in FIGURE 3, with ambiguity-float solutions shown at the top and ambiguity-fixed solutions at the bottom. Only the correctly fixed solutions are depicted as determined by comparing the instantaneously estimated ambiguities to the set of reference ambiguities. The 95% empirical and formal confidence ellipses and intervals are shown in green and red, respectively. They were computed from the empirical and formal position variance matrices. The empirical variance matrix was estimated from the positioning errors as obtained from comparing the estimated positions to precise benchmark coordinates. The formal variance matrix used was determined from the mean of all single-epoch formal variance matrices.
FIGURE 3. Horizontal (north (N), east (E)) position scatter and corresponding vertical (U) time series of the float (top) and correctly fixed (bottom) L1+B1 GPS+BDS single-epoch RTK solutions for an elevation cut-off angle of 10°. The 95% empirical and formal confidence ellipses and intervals are shown in green and red, respectively. The 24 hour (30 second) period is 22:00-22:00 UTC Jan. 5-6, 2016, for patch antennas in (a) and 21:48-21:48 UTC Jan. 8-9, 2016, for survey-grade antennas in (b), which are periods independent of the periods used to determine the stochastic model through the code/phase STDs in Table 1.
Figure 3 shows a good fit between the formal and empirical confidence ellipses/intervals, which thus illustrates realistic LS-VCE STDs in Table 1 that were used in the stochastic model. Note also the two-order of magnitude improvement when going from float to fixed solutions, and that the low-cost receiver plus survey-grade antenna has the most precise ambiguity-float positioning solutions.
Ambiguity Resolution and Positioning Performance for Higher Cut-Off Angles. We subsequently investigated the low-cost L1+B1 GPS+BDS performance for high elevation cut-off angles, so as to mimic situations in urban canyon environments or when low-elevation-angle multipath is present and is to be avoided. We have made comparisons to the survey-grade L1+L2 GPS results. It has been shown that a good ambiguity resolution performance does not necessarily imply a good positioning performance, so we investigated what effect this has on our positioning models.
The following integer least-squares (ILS) success rates (SRs) are thus computed based on epochs with the condition of positional dilution of precision (PDOP) ≤ 10 and averaged over all epochs over two days of data. By including and excluding epochs with large PDOPs, we can show how the positioning performance of the different models is affected by poor receiver-satellite geometries. To better understand how this exclusion of epochs with large PDOPs also influenced the empirical ambiguity-correctly-fixed positioning performance, we constructed TABLE 2, which shows the corresponding positioning STDs for two days of data. These STDs were computed by comparing the estimated positions to precise benchmark coordinates. In addition to the positioning performance, we depict in Table 2 the corresponding empirical ILS SR for full ambiguity-resolution, which is given by the ratio of the number of correctly fixed epochs to the total number of epochs.
TABLE 2. Single-epoch empirical STDs (N, E, U) of correctly fixed positions for the three positioning models together with their ILS SR for four elevation cut-off angles and 48 hours of data (Jan. 4–6 and Jan. 6–8, 2016). The empirical STDs and ILS SRs are also shown when conditioned on PDOP ≤ 10.
Table 2 shows that the L1+B1 low-cost receiver plus patch antenna combination has (as expected) smaller SRs in comparison to those when the survey-grade antenna is used. This latter combination has comparable SRs to the (PDOP-conditioned) SRs of the survey-grade L1+L2 GPS receiver for cut-off angles up to 25°.
In support of better understanding Table 2, FIGURE 4 shows typical positioning results for the different receiver and antenna combinations with elevation cut-off angles of 10° (top two rows) and 25° (bottom two rows). The first and third rows show the local horizontal (N, E) positioning scatterplots and the second and fourth rows the vertical (U) time series over two days of data. The float solutions are depicted in gray, and incorrectly and correctly fixed solutions in red and green, respectively. The zoom-in is given to better show the spread of the correctly fixed solutions with millimeter-centimeter level precisions. The formal ambiguity-float STDs are also shown under the up time series to reflect consistency between the empirical and formal positioning results.
FIGURE 4. Horizontal (N, E) scatterplots and vertical (U) time series for L1+B1 low-cost receiver with patch antenna (first column) with 99.5% (89.8%) ILS SR, L1+B1 low-cost receiver with survey-grade antenna (second column) with 100% (97.8%) ILS SR, and survey-grade L1+L2 GPS (third column) with 100% (94.1%) ILS SR, using 10° (top two rows) and 25° (bottom two rows) cut-off angles respectively (Jan. 4–6, 2016, for low-cost receiver with patch antenna and Jan. 7–8, 2016, for the low-cost and survey-grade receivers with survey-grade antennas). The SRs are conditioned on PDOP ≤ 10 and computed based on all epochs. Below the vertical time series, the ADOP is depicted in blue color, the 0.12-cycles level as red, and ambiguity-float vertical formal STDs are shown in gray.
We also depict in Figure 4 the ambiguity dilution of precision (ADOP) as an easy-to-compute scalar diagnostic to measure the intrinsic model strength for successful ambiguity resolution. The ADOP is defined as
(cycles) (4)
with n being the dimension of the ambiguity vector, the ambiguity variance matrix, and |.| denoting the determinant. ADOP gives a good approximation to the average precision of the ambiguities, and it also provides for a good approximation to the ILS SR. The rule-of-thumb is that an ADOP smaller than about 0.12 cycles corresponds to an ambiguity SR larger than 99.9%.
Figure 4 shows that more solutions are incorrectly fixed (red dots) when the ADOPs (blue lines) are larger than the 0.12 cycle level (red dashed lines). The figure also reveals that the L1+B1 low-cost receiver plus patch antenna combination achieves an ILS SR (99.5%) similar to that of the survey-grade L1+L2 GPS receiver (SR of 100%) for the cut-off angle of 10°. This ILS SR corresponds to the availability of correctly fixed solutions (green dots) with millimeter-centimeter level positioning precision over the two days. The L1+L2 GPS receiver has, moreover, large ambiguity-fixed positioning excursions at the same time as the formal STDs are large for the cut-off angle of 25° due the poor GPS-only receiver-satellite geometry for this high cut-off angle. This is also reflected by the corresponding relatively large ambiguity-fixed STDs depicted in Table 2 that are improved from decimeter- to millimeter-level when the PDOP ≤ 10 condition is applied. Figure 4 also shows that the L1+B1 low-cost receiver with the survey-grade antenna has a larger SR of 97.8% when compared to the PDOP-conditioned SR for L1+L2 GPS of 94.1% for the cut-off angle of 25° (see also Table 2), owing to the use of BDS that significantly improves the receiver-satellite geometry.
Finally, we also tested the low-cost receiver-solution (with survey-grade antennas) for a baseline length of 7 kilometers, where (small) residual slant ionospheric delays are present. It was shown that this combination still has the potential to achieve ambiguity resolution and positioning performance competitive with the survey-grade receiver-solution.
CONCLUSIONS
In this article, we evaluated a low-cost L1+B1 GPS+BDS RTK setup and compared its ambiguity resolution and positioning performance to a survey-grade L1+L2 GPS solution in Dunedin, New Zealand. The LS-VCE procedure was used to determine the variances of the low-cost receivers. The estimated variances are needed so as to formulate a realistic stochastic model, otherwise the ambiguity resolution and hence the achievable positioning precisions would deteriorate.
Since we analyzed a short baseline, the LS-VCE variances were shown to likely be affected by multipath. To mitigate multipath we connected the low-cost receivers to survey-grade antennas with better signal reception and multipath suppression abilities. It was shown that the survey-grade antennas can significantly improve the performance for the low-cost receivers so that the code/phase noise estimates more resemble that of survey-grade receivers. The LS-VCE STDs were furthermore shown to be realistically estimated for an independent time period.
We also demonstrated that the low-cost receivers can give competitive instantaneous ambiguity resolution and positioning performance to that of the survey-grade receivers. This is particularly true when the low-cost receivers are connected to survey-grade antennas.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This article is based on the paper “On the Performance of a Low-cost Single-frequency GPS+BDS RTK Positioning Model” presented at the 2017 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation held Jan. 30-Feb. 1, 2017, in Monterey, California.
Ryan Cambridge at the School of Surveying, University of Otago, collected the low-cost receiver data. Author Peter J.G. Teunissen was supported by an Australian Research Council Federation Fellowship. All of this support is gratefully acknowledged.
MANUFACTURERS
The low-cost receivers used in the research were u-blox EVK-M8T receivers. The survey-grade receivers were Trimble NetRS receivers. The patch antennas were u-blox ANN-MS antennas, while the survey-grade antennas were Trimble Zephyr 2 GNSS antennas.
ROBERT ODOLINSKI conducted his Ph.D. studies at Curtin University, Perth, Australia, from 2011 to 2014. His research focus is next-generation multi-GNSS integer ambiguity resolution enabled precise positioning. In 2015, Odolinski started his position as a lecturer/research fellow in geodesy/GNSS at the School of Surveying, University of Otago, New Zealand.
PETER J.G. TEUNISSEN is a professor of geodesy and navigation and the head of the Curtin GNSS Research Centre, Curtin University. He is also with the Department of Geoscience and Remote Sensing, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands. His research interests include multiple GNSS and the modeling of next-generation GNSS for high-precision positioning, navigation and timing applications.
FURTHER READING
• Authors’ Conference Paper
“On the Performance of a Low-cost Single-frequency GPS+BDS RTK Positioning Model” by R. Odolinski and P.J.G. Teunissen in Proceedings of the 2017 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Monterey, California, Jan. 30 – 1 Feb., 2017, pp. 745–753.
• Authors’ Related Work
“Single-Frequency, Dual-GNSS Versus Dual-frequency, Single-GNSS: A Low-cost and High-grade Receivers GPS-BDS RTK Analysis” by R. Odolinski and P.J.G. Teunissen in Journal of Geodesy, Vol. 90, No. 11, 2016, pp. 1255–1278, doi:10.1007/s00190-016-0921-x.
“Combined BDS, Galileo, QZSS and GPS Single-frequency RTK” by R. Odolinski, P.J.G. Teunissen and D. Odijk in GPS Solutions, Vol. 19, No. 1, 2015, pp. 151–163, doi:10.1007/s10291-014-0376-6.
“Instantaneous BeiDou+GPS RTK Positioning With High Cut-off Elevation Angles” by P.J.G. Teunissen, R. Odolinski and D. Odijk in Journal of Geodesy, Vol. 88, No. 4, 2014, pp. 335–350, doi: 10.1007/s00190-013-0686-4.
“The Future of Single-Frequency Integer Ambiguity Resolution” by S. Verhagen, P.J.G. Teunissen and D. Odijk in Proceedings of the VII Hotine-Marussi Symposium on Mathematical Geodesy, Rome, June 6–10, 2009, edited by N. Sneeuw, P. Novák, M. Crespi and F. Sanso, International Association of Geodesy Symposia, Vol. 137, 2012, pp. 33–38, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-22078-4 5.
“Centimeter-Level Positioning for UAVs and Other Mass-Market Applications” by C. Mongredien, J.-P. Doyen, M. Strom and D. Ammann in Proceedings of ION GNSS+ 2016, the 29th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Portland, Oregon, Sept. 12–16, 2016, pp. 1441–1454.
“Initial Assessment of the COMPASS/BeiDou-2 Regional Navigation Satellite System” by O. Montenbruck, A. Hauschild, P. Steigenberger, U. Hugentobler, P.J.G. Teunissen and S. Nakamura in GPS Solutions, Vol. 17, No. 2, 2013, pp. 211–222, doi:10.1007/s10291-012-0272-x.
• LAMBDA
“On the Reliability of Integer Ambiguity Resolution” by S. Verhagen in Navigation, Vol. 52, No. 2, Summer 2005, pp. 99–110, doi: 10.1002/j.2161-4296.2005.tb01736.x.
“ADOP in Closed Form for a Hierarchy of Multi-frequency Single-baseline GNSS Models” by D. Odijk and P.J.G. Teunissen in Journal of Geodesy, Vol. 82, 2008, pp. 473–492, doi: 10.1007/s00190-007-0197-2.
Harxon has introduced an advanced, high-speed, Bluetooth-enabled wireless rover radio.
The HX-DU1603D, designed for GNSS/RTK surveying and precise positioning, will be showcased this September at the Intergeo trade show in Berlin, Germany.
The HX-DU1603D is a lightweight, ruggedized UHF receiver designed for data communications between 410 MHz and 470 MHz in either 12.5 KHz or 25 KHz channels, which can be widely used in GNSS/RTK surveying and GNSS precise positioning fields.
It is equipped with a Bluetooth transceiver for wireless communications with external devices. It features a 6800 mAh rechargeable internal battery and configurable transmit power between 0.5W and 2W. Its IP67 waterproof capability allows long operating hours outdoors, the company said.
The HX-DU1603D rover radio is easy to operate and use. It is equipped with a 1.9-inch display screen that supports frequency, protocols, power display, serial port baud rate and air baud rate. By deploying these technologies, users can instantly communicate with GNSS precise positioning receivers with the same protocols throughout the world.
The rover radio HX-DU1603D has joint Harxon product lines, including 25W base radio HX-DU8602T with simplex and 35W base radio HX-DU8608D with duplex.
Geneq has introduced the SXblue Platinum, the latest model in the SXblue series. This high-accuracy GNSS receiver is compatible with iOS, Windows and Android Bluetooth, and provides real-time professional-grade positioning information.
Powered by 394 channels, the SXblue Platinum uses all constellations (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou and QZSS) with triple frequency, and provides the ability to use global or local coverage for corrections (SBAS, L-band and RTK).
With the scalable SXblue Platinum Basic, users can activate any frequency or constellation at anytime following initial purchase. The receiver is also field-upgradable, which means that these options can be remotely activated when convenient.
The Platinum was developed on the success of the proven SXblue receivers that were designed to optimize SBAS performances under tree canopy and in rugged terrain. In addition to location performances when working in a restricted environment, the SXblue Platinum is introducing an L-band signal correction via the Atlas service. This worldwide satellite-based correction system can deliver up to sub-decimeter accuracy. Thanks to its new Tracer technology, the receiver can sustain its level of accuracy when the Atlas signal is interrupted. The Atlas service can also stream data over the internet (NTRIP) while ensuring the best available vertical and horizontal accuracy.
Another innovative feature integrated on the Platinum model is the aRTK technology. This feature will allow RTK corrections to be received via the Atlas service, when RTK corrections have not been received for a period of time. For an Atlas-subscribed user device, a high accuracy will still be available at the subscribed service level until RTK is restored.
The new receiver is the same compact, lightweight, palm-sized unit as the SXblue series, which is completely dustproof and ruggedized. The internal, rechargeable, field-replaceable Li-Ion battery has on-board LEDs for easy access to battery life information.
The SXblue Platinum is targeted at GPS/GIS mapping and survey professionals in industries such as forestry, utilities, agriculture, environmental and other natural resource industries in addition to local, state and federal government users.
With a wide variety of compatible software and mobile devices, the support team can help users choose the perfect solution for their applications. A free iOS application for NTRIP/DIP configuration, named iSXblue RTN, is available from the App Store.
Leica Geosystems showed off its Zeno GG04 smart antenna and DS2000 Utility Detection Radar at the 2017 Esri User Conference, which took place July 10-14 in San Diego, California. The Zeno GG04 improve mobile devices’ GNSS accuracy with Real-Time Kinematic (RTK) and precise point positioning (PPP), while the Leica DS2000 Utility Detection Radar detects and positions shallow and deep targets simultaneously.
Tersus GNSS has launched what it calls a new generation GNSS RTK system with multi-technology integrated for surveyors: the NeoRTK System.
NeoRTK System is a high-performing GNSS RTK system applied with a multi-constellation and multi-frequency GNSS engine and various communication protocols. It aims at providing high performance and stable signal reception satisfying surveyors’ demands.
With a high-end GNSS antenna inside, NeoRTK can speed up the time to first fix (TTFF) and improve the capability of anti-jamming.
The 16G internal storage and up to 32G external SD card, along with the built-in large capacity battery for 10-hour field work, unleash surveyors’ productivity in their daily practice. The radio module in the package makes long distance operation more convenient, Tersus said.
With a smart personal digital assistant, which offers high readability, access to essential functions and modes becomes easier and faster. An adjustable measurement rod with automatic tilt compensation ensures efficiency in working.
With all the features, the NeoRTK System enables surveyors to keep up with the latest advancements, leading to a more convenient working mode, which will enhance surveying experience providing exceptional productivity, Tersus said.
Swift Navigation has released its first major firmware upgrade for its flagship product, the Piksi Multi GNSS module.
The upgrade is available at no cost to Piksi Multi users and expands on dynamic real-time kinematic (RTK) application support, increasing functionality for users, expanding use-case applications and allowing users to better leverage existing infrastructure and facilitate post-processing.
Firmware version 1.1 updates include:
Increased Data Output Rates to Support Dynamic Use Cases
GNSS Measurements (Raw Data) – Up to 20 Hz
RTK Output Support
Low Latency Mode – Up to 20 Hz
Time-Matched/Heading Mode – Up to 5 Hz
IMU (Raw Data) – Up to 200 Hz
Moving Baseline RTK Support. The capability to do real-time, precise relative positioning between two receivers where both receivers can now be in motion.
RTK-Based Heading Support. The capability to do real-time RTK-based heading for direction finding — even when stationary — without the need for expensive navigational equipment such as gyrocompasses.
Improved 1 PPS Support. The Piksi Multi Pulse Per Second (PPS) feature has been upgraded to support more customization.
Standalone RINEX Conversion Utility Tool. The tool allows end-users using RTKLIB, such as those with UAV surveying applications, additional tools to support their post-process kinematic needs.
Improved Compatibility with Existing Infrastructure (RTCM 3.1 Input). This added support enables end-users to better leverage existing base station infrastructure to receive RTK corrections (observations, station coordinates, etc.) from already deployed Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS).