New strategy in modeling and prediction of GPS satellite orbits
Abstract
The Operational Control Segment (OCS) of Global Positioning System (GPS) produce predicted navigation message which it is contain satellite ephemerides and clock corrections and utilized by receivers to calculate real-time satellite position and clock corrections for use in navigation solutions. The GPS based positioning and user accuracy are reduced in case of any errors in these ephemerides. In spite of broadcast ephemerides give satisfactory accuracy in numerous applications, they may not be sufficient for applications requiring high accuracy and it is needful to model the satellite orbit. The GPS based positioning process requires appropriate observation and prediction and computation of precise satellite orbits with adjustment techniques. Because the release period of IGS products going from around 1 day to about fourteen days which is a major disadvantage for high precision GNSS processing, this paper was done. In this paper a comparison was carried out between the satellite position calculated utilizing precise position provided by the Final Orbit solution from International GPS Service for Geodynamics (IGS), and the history broadcast ephemerides data in order to modeling and prediction of GPS satellite orbits from navigation file. The proposed method does not involve complex dynamic models, but takes full advantage of relatively mature observable history data of the orbit. The new satellite orbit prediction method is based on Fourier series and used to predict satellite orbit at some time in the future by using broadcast ephemeris history data and the satellite’s position error limited to 35 cm for the first 12 hours and this errors in predicted orbit increased to sub-meter for the second 12 hours and this errors are increased to be bigger than 5 m after 60 hours.
Downloads
References
[2] Specht, C.; Dąbrowski, P. (2017) “Runaway PRN11 GPS satellite”, “Environmental Engineering” 10th International Conference. Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Lithuania, 27–28 April 2017
[3] Bharati Bidikar et al. (2014) “Satellite Clock Error and Orbital Solution Error
Estimation for Precise Navigation Applications”, Positioning, 2014, 5, 22-26.
[4] Tusat, E.; Ozyuksel, F. (2003) “Comparison of GPS satellite coordinates computed from broadcast and IGS final ephemerides”, International Journal of Engineering and Geosciences (IJEG), Vol; 3; , Issue; 1, pp. 012-019, February, 2018, ISSN 2548-0960, Turkey, DOI: 10.26833/ijeg.337806.
[5] Monaghan, R. (2006) “GPS Satellite Position Estimation from Ephemeris Data by Minimum Mean Square Error Filtering Under Conditions of Selective Availability”, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Portland State University.
[6] Warren, D.; Raquet, J. (2003) “Broadcast vs. precise GPS ephemerides: a historical perspective”, GPS Solutions September.
[7] Yunhang, Z.; Chao, X. Chenglin, C. (2013) “ Method and Analysis of Medium and Long Term Satellite Orbit Prediction Based on Satellite Broadcast Ephemeris Parameters”, International Journal of Future Generation Communication and Networking Vol. 8, No. 2 (2015), pp. 187-196
[8] Seeber, G. (2003) “Satellite Geodesy”, Copyright 2003 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, 10785 Berlin.
[9] Whalley, S. (1990) “Precise orbit determination for GPS satellites”, PHD. Thesis. Institute of engineering surveying and space geodesy, Nottingham University.
[10] Horemuz, M.; Andersson, J. (2013) “Polynomial interpolation of GPS satellite coordinates”, GPS Solut (2006) 10: 67–72. DOI 10.1007/s10291-005-0018-0.
[11] www.mathworks.com.
Copyright (c) 2019 IJRDO - Journal of Applied Science (ISSN: 2455-6653)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Author(s) and co-author(s) jointly and severally represent and warrant that the Article is original with the author(s) and does not infringe any copyright or violate any other right of any third parties, and that the Article has not been published elsewhere. Author(s) agree to the terms that the IJRDO Journal will have the full right to remove the published article on any misconduct found in the published article.