Joint 9D Receiver Localization and Ephemeris Correction with LEO and $5$G Base Stations
In this paper, we use the Fisher information matrix (FIM) to analyze the interaction between low-earth orbit (LEO) satellites and $5$G base stations in providing $9$D receiver localization and correcting LEO ephemeris. First, we give a channel model that captures all the information in the LEO-recei...
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Zusammenfassung: | In this paper, we use the Fisher information matrix (FIM) to analyze the
interaction between low-earth orbit (LEO) satellites and $5$G base stations in
providing $9$D receiver localization and correcting LEO ephemeris. First, we
give a channel model that captures all the information in the LEO-receiver,
LEO-BS, and BS-receiver links. Subsequently, we use FIM to capture the amount
of information about the channel parameters in these links. Then, we transform
these FIM for channel parameters to the FIM for the $9$D ($3$D position, $3$D
orientation, and $3$D velocity estimation) receiver localization parameters and
the LEO position and velocity offset. Closed-form expressions for the entries
in the FIM for these location parameters are presented. Our results on
identifiability utilizing the FIM for the location parameters indicate: i) with
one LEO, we need three BSs and three time slots to both estimate the $9$D
location parameters and correct the LEO position and velocity, ii) with two
LEO, we need three BSs and three time slots to both estimate the $9$D location
parameters and correct the LEO position and velocity, and iii) with three LEO,
we need three BSs and four-time slots to both estimate the $9$D location
parameters and correct the LEO position and velocity. Another key insight is
that through the Cramer Rao lower bound we show that with a single LEO, three
time slots, and three BSs, the receiver positioning error, velocity estimation
error, orientation error, LEO position offset estimation error, and LEO
velocity offset estimation error are $0.1 \text{ cm}$, $1 \text{ mm/s}$,
$10^{-3} \text{ rad}$, $0.01 \text{ m}$, and $1 \text{ m/s}$, respectively. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.16728 |