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Synthetic Meta-Signal Observations: The Beidou Case.

Daniele BorioCiro Gioia
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
A Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) meta-signal is obtained when two or more side-band components from different frequencies are jointly processed as a single entity. This requires advanced signal processing techniques able to cope with the subcarrier, generated by the interaction of the side-band components, and handle possibly multi-peaked ambiguous correlation functions. An alternative approach to meta-signal processing is to reconstruct meta-signal observations using side-band measurements. Meta-signal high-accuracy pseudoranges can be reconstructed from the side-band code and carrier observations. The success of the reconstruction depends on several factors, including the frequency separation of the side-band components and the presence of measurement biases. The Beidou Navigation Satellite System (BDS), with its second- and third-generation signals, provides a wide range of components with various frequency separations. In this paper, we experimentally investigate the performance and limitations of the measurement reconstruction approach using Beidou observations. When the B1I and B1C components are considered, their reduced frequency separation leads to unambiguous measurements fully exploiting the potential of meta-signals. For larger frequency separations, jumps and discontinuities are observed in the position domain, which is a major limiting factor of this type of approach.
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