Remote Sensing (Dec 2021)

Signal-to-Noise Ratio Analyses of Spaceborne GNSS-Reflectometry from Galileo and BeiDou Satellites

  • Yang Nan,
  • Shirong Ye,
  • Jingnan Liu,
  • Bofeng Guo,
  • Shuangcheng Zhang,
  • Weiqiang Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14010035
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 35

Abstract

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In recent years, Global Navigation Satellite System Reflectometry (GNSS-R) technology has made considerable progress with the increasing of GNSS-R satellites in orbit, the improvements of GNSS-R data processing technology, and the expansion of its geophysical applications. Meanwhile, with the modernization and evolution of GNSS systems, more signal sources and signal modulation modes are available. The effective use of the signals at different frequencies or from new GNSS systems can improve the accuracy, reliability, and resolution of the GNSS-R data products. This paper analyses the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the GNSS-R measurements from Galileo and BeiDou-3 (BDS-3) systems, which is one of the important indicators to measure the quality of GNSS-R data. The multi-GNSS (GPS, Galileo and BDS-3) complex waveform products generated from the raw intermediate frequency data from TechDemoSat-1 (TDS-1) satellite and Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS) constellation are used for such analyses. The SNR and normalized SNR (NSNR) of the reflected signals from Galileo and BDS-3 satellites are compared to these from GPS. Preliminary results show that the GNSS-R SNRs from Galileo and BDS-3 are ∼1–2 dB lower than the GNSS-R measurements from GPS, which could be due to the power of the transmitted power and the bandwidth of the receiver. In addition, the effect of coherent integration time on GNSS-R SNR is also assessed for different GNSS signals. It is shown that the SNR of the reflected signals can be improved by using longer coherent integration time (∼0.4–0.8 dB with 2 ms coherent integration and ∼0.6–1.2 dB with 4 ms coherent integration). In addition, it is also shown that the SNR can be improved more efficiently (∼0.2–0.4 dB) for reflected BDS-3 and Galileo signals than for GPS. These results can provide useful references for the design of future spaceborne GNSS-R instrument compatible with reflections from multi-GNSS constellations.

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