New Global Navigation Satellite System Developments and Their Impact on Survey Service Providers and SurveyorsChris RIZOS, Matthew B. HIGGINS and S. HEWITSON
1) This article is based on a paper in Proceedings of SSC2005 Spatial Intelligence, Innovation and Praxis: The national biennial Conference of the Spatial Sciences Institute, September 2005. Melbourne: Spatial Sciences Institute. ISBN 0-9581366-2-9 Key words: Galileo, Global Navigation Satellite Systems, GLONASS, GNSS, GPS. SUMMARYThe surveying and mapping industry has been revolutionised by the use of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), involving satellites, ground reference station infrastructure and user equipment to determine positions around the world. The Global Positioning System (GPS) from the USA is the best known, and currently fully operational, GNSS. Russia also operates its own GNSS called GLONASS. Fuelling growth in the coming decade will be next generation GNSS, and space augmentations of these that are currently being developed. The USA is modernizing GPS, Russia is revitalising GLONASS, and Europe is moving ahead with its own Galileo system. Watershed advances in a major technology like GNSS only occur in 20 to 30 year cycles. Therefore it is now an opportune time to explore potential opportunities and issues for the spatial information industry. The first part of the paper outlines how the next generation of GNSS will bring extra satellites and signals to deliver better accuracy, reliability and availability. Extra satellites will make possible improved performance for all applications, and especially where satellite signals can be obscured, such as in urban canyons, under tree canopies or in open-cut mines. In its various modes, modernized GNSS will also deliver higher accuracy and improved speed-to-first-fix for carrier phase-based positioning. For example, the European Union's (EU) Galileo system will offer a Commercial Service that will be capable of delivering 0.1m accuracy without a direct link between the user and ground reference stations. The extra satellites and signals will improve the performance and reliability for all applications right down to the centimetre accuracy techniques used in surveying and geodesy. The second part of the paper looks at some of the implications of these improvements for the service providers of continuously operating reference stations (CORS), as well as for survey users. For example, the EU's Galileo system is much more open to civilian and commercial involvement, and allows for regional and local augmentation to the core system. How will current CORS infrastructure be able to cope providing differential positioning services to users tracking a combination of GPS, Galileo and perhaps GLONASS signals? What is the benefit of the modernized GPS L2C signal? Will mixed GPS/Galileo RTK services be possible? 1. INTRODUCTIONGlobal Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) involve satellites, ground stations and user equipment to determine positions around the world and are now used across many areas of society. Among currently used GNSS, the Global Positioning System (GPS) from the USA is the best known, and currently fully operational, GNSS. Russia also operates its own GNSS called GLONASS. A European Commission report claimed that the GNSS industry in 2001 had a global turnover (equipment and applications) of 15 billion Euros. The report forecasts this to rise to 140 billion Euros by 2015. It also identifies North America, Europe and the Pacific Rim as the dominant markets for the next 5 years. Fuelling growth during the next decade will be next generation GNSS that are currently being developed. Major components are the USA’s modernized GPS and Europe’s planned Galileo system. Watershed advances in a major technology like GNSS only occur in 20 to 30 year cycles, therefore this is an opportune time to explore potential opportunities and issues for the spatial information industry. 2. THE GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM2.1 The Current GPSThe most widely used current system is the Global Positioning System (GPS). The current constellation of 29 satellites (see http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/gps/) operate without a hitch and civilian applications of GPS are now considered to be quite mature. For a detailed description of the current GPS see UN Action Team on GNSS [2004]. While it is beyond the scope of this paper to provide detailed review material, the following points are of relevance for later discussions:
For the spatial industry, applications can be classified according to the achievable accuracy:
2.2 GPS ModernizationThe USA has embarked on a program of GPS Modernization to provide better accuracy and more powerful and secure signals from future GPS satellites. Again, it is not within the scope of this document to describe this program in detail; see US Coast Guard Navigation Center [2005]. While there are various improvements planned, the important issues to note for this paper revolve around extra signals to be broadcast by future GPS satellites:
3. FROM GPS TO GNSSPerhaps the single most important shortcoming of GPS is also its most obvious; there are some places where GPS simply does not work due to a lack of available satellites. Therefore, while GPS Modernization will have a significant impact, a major influence in the future will be systems offering additional satellites to those offered by GPS alone. We may therefore think in terms of a generic, overall GNSS combining a number of sub-systems. 3.1 GLONASS from RussiaGLONASS was originally deployed as the Soviet Union’s answer to GPS. The design of GLONASS is very similar to GPS except that originally each satellite broadcast its own particular frequency with the same codes. GPS satellites broadcast the same frequencies and a receiver differentiates between satellites by recognising the particular part of the codes broadcast by a given satellite (this is known as a CDMA, or Code Division Multple Access, scheme). GLONASS can also provide a different level of service to Military users compared to Civilian users. For a detailed description of GLONASS see UN Action Team on GNSS [2004]. Current status information is available from the Russian Federation Ministry of Defense web site at GLONASS [2005]. Since the collapse of the USSR, the Russian Federation has struggled to find sufficient funds to maintain GLONASS and at the time of writing (mid-2005) there are only 14 satellites functioning (as opposed to the 24 necessary for full operational capability). However, the Russian Federation has recently commenced a program to revitalise GLONASS:
Survey-grade receivers capable of tracking both GPS and GLONASS have been available for some time. These combined receivers have demonstrated a marked improvement in reliability and availability in areas where satellite signals can be obstructed, such as in urban areas, under tree canopies or in open-cut mines. 3.2 The Quasi-Zenith Satellite System from JapanThe Quasi-Zenith Satellite System (QZSS) is a multi-satellite augmentation system proposed to the Japanese government by a private sector consortium. The plan is to launch at least three satellites broadcasting GPS-like (and perhaps Galileo- and GLONASS-like) signals in an orbital configuration that increases the number of satellites available at high elevation angles over Japan (hence the term “quasi-zenith”). This would benefit modified GPS receivers operating in areas with significant signal obstructions such as urban canyons. It is expected that a demonstration QZSS satellite will be launched in 2008. For a detailed description of QZSS see UN Action Team on GNSS [2004] and Tsujine [2005]. The orbital configuration of the QZSS constellation is such that the satellites will also pass over parts of the Asia-Pacific region (the satellites must be launched into a geostationary altitude). That will effectively increase the number of satellites available to suitably equipped GPS users in that region. 3.3 Galileo from the European UnionPerhaps the most exciting impact on the future of GNSS is the decision by the European Union to launch its Galileo project. For a detailed description of Galileo see European Commission Directorate General Energy and Transport [2005] and UN Action Team on GNSS [2004]. For the purposes of this paper, the following points are relevant:
4. THE PROMISE OF A BROADER GNSSIt can be seen from the above descriptions that the next generation GNSS will bring significant improvements compared to the currently available systems. In ten years time there may be as many as 80 satellites from GPS, GLONASS, Galileo and QZSS, broadcasting a variety of signals and codes, which can be used by suitably equipped users anywhere on the globe for a range of navigation and positioning applications. QZSS will also add three or more satellites for users in the Asia Pacific region. The L1 signal alone is sufficient for many mass-market applications requiring an accuracy of (say) 3 to 10 metres. The availability of many more satellites will enable new applications in areas where the current lack of satellites has been a hindrance to market growth. 4.1 More Satellites Available for UsersA global snapshot of the satellite visibilities for GPS-only, combined GPS/GLONASS, combined GPS/Galileo and combined GPS/GLONASS/Galileo scenarios are presented in Figure 1. The global simulation was carried out by computing single-epoch snapshot solutions for 1200h on 27 May 2005 at 1 degree intervals of latitude and longitude, and an altitude of 50m, using a 15° masking angle. Orthographic global colour maps are ideal for displaying spatial variations. The average satellite visibilities, excluding the high latitude areas, are approximately 6, 12, 15 and 21 for GPS, GPS/GLONASS, GPS/Galileo and GPS/GLONASS/Galileo scenarios respectively. The visibility improvements of the combined systems with respect to GPS-only are therefore approximately 200%, 250% and 350% for GPS/GLONASS, GPS/Galileo and GPS/GLONASS/Galileo respectively. Figure 1. Global snapshot of satellite visibility with 15° masking angle (1200h 27 May 2005). 4.2 The Benefits of More SatellitesGPS and GLONASS combined have already demonstrated the benefits of extra satellites, and Galileo brings all that and more. The benefits of the expected extra satellites and their signals outlined above can be categorised in terms of continuity, accuracy, efficiency, availability and reliability. Extra satellites improve continuity:
Extra satellites and signals can improve accuracy:
Extra satellites and signals can improve efficiency:
Extra satellites and signals can improve availability (of satellites at a particular location):
Extra satellites and signals can improve reliability:
It should also be emphasised that newer systems, with improved electronics and antennas in the satellites and user receivers, will deliver overall improvements in data quality. One unknown factor, however, is whether the new multi-frequency user receiver antenna will have the phase centre stability of the current Dorne-Margolin antennas used by the International GNSS Service (IGS). 4.3 Positioning Capability will become UbiquitousThere are factors other than just having more satellites that will influence future market growth in devices and services that require positioning/navigation. One important issue is the USA’s E911 policy, and its equivalent in Europe. These introduce a legal requirement that a mobilephone making an emergency call must be capable of being positioned (typically to better than 100m accuracy). This is leading to many next generation mobilephones being equipped with a GNSS capability. An increased availability of GNSS satellites, along with position-capable mobilephones and personal devices, are enabling factors for a predicted boom in so-called location based services. That in turn is driving the development of a range of positioning technologies that can also work inside buildings, hence indoor positioning is a hot topic for research. GNSS is but one technology being touted as the ideal seamless indoor/outdoor positioning system [Rizos, 2005]. All of these factors combined means we are likely to see positioning capability moving from specialised markets such as navigation, surveying and mapping, to something much more available to the general public. In short, position capability is likely to become much more ubiquitous during the coming decade. 4.4 The Lack of Uniform CompatibilityHowever, there are also some GNSS issues that will complicate how both the location based services markets and the traditional surveying/geodesy/mapping markets progress. Apart from the low-end requirements of the LBS mass market, specialised applications will require the availability of multiple GNSS frequencies for improved performance. They also require as many satellites as possible delivering the improved capability at any time and in any location. In that context it is important to note that there will not be uniform compatibility across all the GNSS sub-systems in terms of the signals broadcast, and the timing of when new capabilities become available. In relation to signal compatibility, there will only be subsets of the possible 80 satellites broadcasting a second signal at the same frequency. The combinations for multiple signals are:
Considering the timing of when new capabilities will become available, it is important to note that the currently stated time frames for GPS Modernization, GLONASS replenishment, and QZSS and Galileo deployment are not synchronised. 4.5 The Expansion of High Accuracy Applications into the Mass MarketCurrent state-of-the-art techniques in GPS Surveying squeeze centimetre accuracy from the least possible amount of data from the reference and rover receivers in real-time, using all satellites in view and observations of pseudorange and carrier phase on the two L-band frequencies (L1 and L2). Therefore, GPS is already a very good tool for high accuracy applications. In fact to date GPS surveying techniques have concentrated on achieving the best possible accuracy. The advantages from the coming developments to GNSS sub-systems outlined above is that the spotlight will be on improved availability, efficiency and reliability. The future of high accuracy GNSS must recognise the following issues:
Therefore, the holy grail for future high accuracy GNSS applications is to have the maximum number of satellites, broadcasting the maximum number of signals, being tracked by the least expensive receivers, delivering the most robust solution. The future is impossible to predict with any certainty, but the following are ‘snapshots’ (at five-year intervals) of how high accuracy applications may develop. Today, 2005:
2010:
2015:
All of this will see a continuation of the trend that began around 2000 for high accuracy positioning applications to move from surveying into other high value and mission critical markets such as machine guidance. By 2015, the days when high accuracy positioning capabilities were the exclusive domain of surveyors will have passed. The ability to position everywhere with decimetre, and even centimetre, accuracy will be widely available and affordable. Therefore, it is likely that by 2015 mass-market location-based services based on high accuracy positioning will be common place. 5. THE IMPLICATIONS OF A BROADER GNSSThe new GNSS capabilities outlined above will have significant impacts on the spatial information industry. Current GNSS reference station infrastructure will obviously be impacted, but there may also be wider implications for providers and users of the Spatial Data Infrastructure. 5.1 Implications for Providers of Continuously Operating Reference Stations for GNSSThe growing importance of satellite positioning as an enabling technology across many industries has led to a realisation that Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS) are an important part of the infrastructure for the spatial sciences. The establishment of the International GNSS Service (IGS) in 1992 was a significant step toward the provision of such infrastructure on a global basis. The 1990s also saw the introduction of DGPS services to overcome the U.S. policy of Selective Availability, that deliberately degraded the point positioning accuracy available to civilian GPS users. Some augmentation services using CORS are aimed at commercial users generally while others are designed for particular sectors such as maritime or civil aviation users. More recently, public sector organisations responsible for surveying and mapping infrastructure across the globe have begun to establish CORS networks and services to support real-time centimetre accuracy positioning. Working from the international through to the local scene, there are various levels of CORS providers:
The GNSS developments outlined in this paper are of particular interest to all of these CORS providers. It is too early to predict exactly how CORS providers will be affected, but the following questions will need to be addressed eventually:
As with any infrastructure development, the institutional arrangements are likely to be even more problematic than the technological issues. The following two issues need to considered:
These two points lead to a need for much greater collaboration among current CORS providers and a need to account for a major new player in the field of GNSS services: the Galileo Concessionaire. 5.2 Implications for Users and Providers of Spatial Data InfrastructureIt is important for the spatial information industry to look beyond just being directly involved in GNSS services and to consider the wider implications for providers and users of the Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI). Compatibility between SDI data sets and GNSS Delivering the full advantage of GNSS requires a compatible and homogeneous geodetic infrastructure underpinning all SDI. Many developed countries have adopted datums based on the International Terrestrial Reference Frame (ITRF) that are compatible with GNSS. An example is the adoption of the Geocentric Datum of Australia (GDA), which has been an important initiative for GNSS campatibility. Many areas of the world (especially developing countries) are not so well prepared and a suitable geodetic infrastructure is still not available. However, the IGS does have a global infrastructure in place to help propagate the International Terrestrial Reference Frame to such countries. In many areas even the most recently established datums are fixed in time (in terms of plate tectonics), as for example the GDA. This will become problematic when users are able to position themselves with an accuracy equivalent to a few years of the motion of the underlying tectonic plate (typically several centimetres per year). Establishing a GNSS-compatible datum is only the beginning. If applications such as location-based services are to thrive, it is important that all major spatial data sets are moved onto that datum in a way that maintains the accuracy of the original spatial data set. These issues are becoming important for applications outside SDI’s traditional sphere of influence that are reliant on GNSS and require a seamless geodetic reference frame across the data sets they use. Some applications will be for very demanding users of the SDI, especially safety-of-life applications like Civil Aviation, Emergency Services and Disaster Management. This leads to a requirement for the providers of SDI around the world (like National Mapping Organisations) to make their geodetic infrastructure and other foundation data sets more compatible and reliable in order to service increasingly demanding GNSS users. Liaison with national neighbours and international associations will be needed to make this a reality. The AFREF Project aimed at a GNSS-compatible and homogeneous geodetic infrastructure for the African continent is shaping up as an excellent example of a framework for such regional cooperation. Ubiquity of Positioning As mentioned earlier in this paper, the next generation of GNSS will greatly enhance the accuracy and reliability of the positioning task. Integration of other measurements and sensors will also lead to the development of indoor positioning capabilities. Ubiquitous positioning will be combined with high bandwidth mobile communications and increasingly intelligent spatial analysis tools. The SDI in all its aspects will need to support a rapidly expanding number of users needing to analyse increasingly sophisticated specialist data sets, in combination with traditional foundation SDI data sets. Furthermore, users will expect it all to work in real-time on small mobile devices. Accuracy and Reliability Improvements Perhaps the most pressing issue in relation to SDI is that users will soon be able to position themselves with better accuracy than can be found in many SDI foundation data sets. By 2010, developments such as Galileo’s Commercial Service will be routinely delivering 0.1 metre accuracy directly to users in their handheld receivers. At the same time we will also see centimetre accuracy applications move into mainstream mass-markets. We could see centimetre accuracy location-based services such as real-time engineering design. The accuracy and reliability required in safety-of-life applications could be transferred from aircraft to trains, trucks, buses and cars. It may soon be possible for spatial data and accurate positioning to be brought to bear on reducing road toll. However, issues such as spatial accuracy, data access and institutional arrangements will need to be overhauled before the SDI can support users of location-based services demanding such high standards of accuracy and reliability. 6. CONCLUDING REMARKSThe spatial information industry industry has been revolutionised by the use of Global Navigation Satellite Systems. The Global Positioning System is the only currently fully operational GNSS, although Russia also operates its own GNSS. Fuelling growth in the coming decade will be next generation GNSS, and space augmentations of these, that are currently being developed. The USA is modernizing GPS, Russia is revitalising GLONASS, and Europe is moving ahead with its own Galileo system. The first part of the paper outlined how the next generation of GNSS will bring extra satellites and signals to deliver better accuracy, reliability and availability. Extra satellites will make possible improved performance for all applications, and especially where satellite signals can be obscured, such as in urban canyons, under tree canopies or in open-cut mines. In its various modes, modernized GNSS will also deliver higher accuracy and improved speed-to-first-fix for carrier phase-based positioning. The second part of the paper discussed some of the implications of these improvements for the service providers of continuously operating reference stations, for the underlying Spatial Data Infrastructure, as well as for survey users as the market for high accuracy positioning expands into new location-based services. REFERENCES
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTESChris Rizos and S. Hewitson are working at the School of Surveying & Spatial Information Systems, The University of New South Wales in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Prof. Chris Rizos is Chair of IAG Commission 4 “Positioning and Applications”. Matthew B. Higgins is working at the Survey Infrastructure Services, Department of Natural Resources and Mines in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Matt is Chair of FIG Commission 5 “Positioning and Measurement” CONTACTSProf. Chris Rizos Mr. Matt Higgins, Senior Surveyor
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