Removing day-boundary discontinuities on GNSS clock estimates: methodology and results

Global navigation satellite system (GNSS) satellites are equipped with very stable atomic clocks that can be used for assessing the models and strategies involved in the estimation processes, where the clock estimates should present high stability. For instance, GNSS products (including satellite an...

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Veröffentlicht in:GPS solutions 2021-04, Vol.25 (2), Article 35
Hauptverfasser: Rovira-Garcia, Adrià, Juan, José Miguel, Sanz, Jaume, González-Casado, Guillermo, Ventura-Traveset, Javier, Cacciapuoti, Luigi, Schoenemann, Erik
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Global navigation satellite system (GNSS) satellites are equipped with very stable atomic clocks that can be used for assessing the models and strategies involved in the estimation processes, where the clock estimates should present high stability. For instance, GNSS products (including satellite and receiver clocks) are computed on daily basis, i.e., with the data of each day being processed independently from other days. This choice produces the well-known day-boundary discontinuities (DBDs) on clock estimates that stem from the estimation process, rather than to the nature of the atomic clock itself. The aim of the present contribution is to propose a strategy to estimate the satellite and receiver clock offsets that is capable to reduce the DBDs observed in the products of different analysis centers (ACs) within the International GNSS Service (IGS), ultimately improving the accuracy of clock estimates. Our approach relies on the use of unambiguous, undifferenced and uncombined carrier phase measurements collected by a network of permanent receivers on ground. The strategy considers the carrier phase hardware delays and assumes their possible variations along time. Our daily data processing aims to maintaining the natural continuity over days of the carrier phase measurements after integer ambiguity resolution (IAR), even if IAR is performed on daily batches. We compare our clock estimations with those computed by different IGS ACs, evaluating the linear behavior of the satellite atomic clocks on the day change. The results show the removal of DBD on clock estimates computed with the continuous and unambiguous carrier phase measurements. This DBD improvement may benefit the statistical characterization of long-term phenomena correlated with the on-board clocks.
ISSN:1080-5370
1521-1886
DOI:10.1007/s10291-021-01085-3