Geo-spatial Information Science (Jan 2022)

Precise orbit determination for LEO satellites: single-receiver ambiguity resolution using GREAT products

  • Xingxing Li,
  • Yujie Qin,
  • Keke Zhang,
  • Jiaqi Wu,
  • Wei Zhang,
  • Qian Zhang,
  • Hongmin Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/10095020.2021.2022966
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 0, no. 0
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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In recent years, the large Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellations have become a hot topic due to their great potential to improve the Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) positioning performance. One of the important focus is how to obtain the accurate and reliable orbits for these constellations with dozens of LEO satellites. The GNSS-based Precise Orbit Determination (POD) will be exclusively performed to achieve this goal, where the Integer Ambiguity Resolution (IAR) plays a key role in acquiring high-quality orbits. In this study, we present a comprehensive analysis of the benefit of the single-receiver IAR in LEO POD and discuss its implication for the future LEO constellations. We perform ambiguity-fixed LEO POD for four typical missions, including Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) Follow-On (GRACE-FO), Swarm, Jason-3 and Sentinel-3, using the Uncalibrated Phase Delay (UPD) products generated by our GREAT (GNSS+ REsearch, Application and Teaching) software. The results show that the ambiguity fixing processing can significantly improve the accuracy of LEO orbits. There are negligible differences between our UPD-based ambiguity-fixed orbits and those based on the Observable Signal Bias (OSB) and Integer Recovery Clock (IRC) products, indicating the good-quality of UPD products we generated. Compared to the float solution, the fixed solution presents a better consistency with the external precise science orbits and the largest accuracy improvement of 5 mm is achieved for GRACE-FO satellites. Meanwhile, the benefit can be observed in laser ranging residuals as well, with a Standard Deviation (STD) reduction of 3–4 mm on average for the fixed solutions. Apart from the absolute orbits, the relative accuracy of the space baseline is also improved by 20–30% in the fixed solutions. The result demonstrates the superior performance of the ambiguity-fixed LEO POD, which appears as a particularly promising technique for POD of future LEO constellations.

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