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Study of Global Navigation Satellite System Receivers' Accuracy for Unmanned Vehicles.

Authors :
Miletiev, Rosen
Petkov, Peter Z.
Yordanov, Rumen
Brusev, Tihomir
Source :
Sensors (14248220); Sep2024, Vol. 24 Issue 18, p5909, 19p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The development of unmanned ground vehicles and unmanned aerial vehicles requires high-precision navigation due to the autonomous motion and higher traffic intensity. The existing L1 band GNSS receivers are a good and cheap decision for smartphones, vehicle navigation, fleet management systems, etc., but their accuracy is not good enough for many civilian purposes. At the same time, real-time kinematic (RTK) navigation allows for position precision in a sub-centimeter range, but the system cost significantly narrows this navigation to a very limited area of applications, such as geodesy. A practical solution includes the integration of dual-band GNSS receivers and inertial sensors to solve high-precision navigation tasks, but GNSS position accuracy may significantly affect IMU performance due to having a great impact on Kalman filter performance in unmanned vehicles. The estimation of dilution-of-precision (DOP) parameters is essential for the filter performance as the optimality of the estimation in the filter is closely connected to the quality of a priori information about the noise covariance matrix and measurement noise covariance. In this regard, the current paper analyzes the DOP parameters of the latest generation dual-band GNSS receivers and compares the results with the L1 ones. The study was accomplished using two types of antennas—L1/L5 band patch and wideband helix antennas, which were designed and assembled by the authors. In addition, the study is extended with a comparison of GNSS receivers from different generations but sold on the market by one of the world's leading GNSS manufacturers. The analyses of dilution-of-precision (DOP) parameters show that the introduction of dual-band receivers may significantly increase the navigation precision in a sub-meter range, in addition to multi-constellation signal reception. The fast advances in the performance of the integrated CPU in GNSS receivers allow the number of correlations and tracking satellites to be increased from 8–10 to 24–30, which also significantly improves the position accuracy even of L1-band receivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14248220
Volume :
24
Issue :
18
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Sensors (14248220)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179964573
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/s24185909