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Journal ArticleDOI

Homogeneous reprocessing of GPS, GLONASS and SLR observations

TLDR
In this paper, a combined reprocessing of GPS and GLONASS observations was performed to estimate combined GPS+GLONASS satellite clocks, with first results presented in this paper.
Abstract
The International GNSS Service (IGS) provides operational products for the GPS and GLONASS constellation. Homogeneously processed time series of parameters from the IGS are only available for GPS. Reprocessed GLONASS series are provided only by individual Analysis Centers (i. e. CODE and ESA), making it difficult to fully include the GLONASS system into a rigorous GNSS analysis. In view of the increasing number of active GLONASS satellites and a steadily growing number of GPS+GLONASS-tracking stations available over the past few years, Technische Universitat Dresden, Technische Universitat Munchen, Universitat Bern and Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule Zurich performed a combined reprocessing of GPS and GLONASS observations. Also, SLR observations to GPS and GLONASS are included in this reprocessing effort. Here, we show only SLR results from a GNSS orbit validation. In total, 18 years of data (1994–2011) have been processed from altogether 340 GNSS and 70 SLR stations. The use of GLONASS observations in addition to GPS has no impact on the estimated linear terrestrial reference frame parameters. However, daily station positions show an RMS reduction of 0.3 mm on average for the height component when additional GLONASS observations can be used for the time series determination. Analyzing satellite orbit overlaps, the rigorous combination of GPS and GLONASS neither improves nor degrades the GPS orbit precision. For GLONASS, however, the quality of the microwave-derived GLONASS orbits improves due to the combination. These findings are confirmed using independent SLR observations for a GNSS orbit validation. In comparison to previous studies, mean SLR biases for satellites GPS-35 and GPS-36 could be reduced in magnitude from $$-35$$ and $$-38$$  mm to $$-12$$ and $$-13$$  mm, respectively. Our results show that remaining SLR biases depend on the satellite type and the use of coated or uncoated retro-reflectors. For Earth rotation parameters, the increasing number of GLONASS satellites and tracking stations over the past few years leads to differences between GPS-only and GPS+GLONASS combined solutions which are most pronounced in the pole rate estimates with maximum 0.2 mas/day in magnitude. At the same time, the difference between GLONASS-only and combined solutions decreases. Derived GNSS orbits are used to estimate combined GPS+GLONASS satellite clocks, with first results presented in this paper. Phase observation residuals from a precise point positioning are at the level of 2 mm and particularly reveal poorly modeled yaw maneuver periods.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A New Online Service for the Validation of Multi-GNSS Orbits Using SLR

TL;DR: The goal of the paper and GOVUS itself is to determine what is the current quality of multi-GNSS orbits validated using SLR results; what kinds of systematic errors can affect GNSS orbits and SLR observations; and how to provide the online analysis tools to the broadest possible multi- GNSS community.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multi-GNSS orbit determination using satellite laser ranging

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the influence of the number of SLR observations on the quality of the 3-day multi-GNSS orbit solution using solely SLR data.
Journal ArticleDOI

A consistent combination of GNSS and SLR with minimum constraints

TL;DR: It is shown that a common origin, scale and orientation can be reliably realized from the combination strategy in comparison to the ITRF2008, and uncertainties due to solar radiation pressure modeling in the coefficient time series can be reduced up to 50 % in the GNSS+SLR solution compared to theGNSS-only solution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Height changes over subglacial Lake Vostok, East Antarctica: Insights from GNSS observations

TL;DR: In this article, repeated measurements of surface height profiles around Vostok station using kinematic GNSS observations on a snowmobile allow the quantification of surface surface height changes at 308 crossover points.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Precise point positioning for the efficient and robust analysis of GPS data from large networks

TL;DR: This work determines precise GPS satellite positions and clock corrections from a globally distributed network of GPS receivers, and analysis of data from hundreds to thousands of sites every day with 40-Mflop computers yields results comparable in quality to the simultaneous analysis of all data.
Journal ArticleDOI

The development and evaluation of the Earth Gravitational Model 2008 (EGM2008)

TL;DR: EGM2008 as mentioned in this paper is a spherical harmonic model of the Earth's gravitational potential, developed by a least squares combination of the ITG-GRACE03S gravitational model and its associated error covariance matrix, with the gravitational information obtained from a global set of area-mean free-air gravity anomalies defined on a 5 arc-minute equiangular grid.
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The International GNSS Service in a changing landscape of Global Navigation Satellite Systems

TL;DR: The IGS Strategic Plan and future directions of the globally-coordinated ~400 station IGS network, tracking data and information products, and outlines the scope of a few of its numerous working groups and pilot projects as the world anticipates a truly multi-system GNSS in the coming decade are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

ITRF2008: an improved solution of the international terrestrial reference frame

TL;DR: ITRF2008 as mentioned in this paper is a refined version of the International Terrestrial Reference Frame based on reprocessed solutions of the four space geodetic techniques: VLBI, SLR, GPS and DORIS, spanning 29, 26, 12.5 and 16 years of observations, respectively.
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