Real2 DGNSS
Real2 DGNSS
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Outline
!
Transport Protocol
Comparison with other Formats General Requirements for Standard Data Formats Other Issues
Control Protocol
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM SC-104: Enabling Standards that Support Emerging Positioning and Related Technologies Rudy Kalfus (SC-104 Chairman) Bob Markle (RTCM President)
Streaming GNSS Data Via Internet-Symposium Frankfurt, 6 February 2006
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM founded in 1947 as U.S. State Department Advisory Committee Now an independent membership organization
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM Standards Work RTCM Standards RTCM supports development of standards and regulations of
International Maritime Organization (IMO) International Telecommunications Union (ITU) International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM Liaisons
European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) Comit International Radio-Maritime (CIRM) Cospas-Sarsat International Association of Aids to Navigation and Lighthouse Authorities (IALA) International Hydrographic Bureau (IHB) National Marine Electronics Association (NMEA)
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM Members 22 Government Agencies from 7 nations 56 Manufacturers from 14 nations 41 Others:
Associations Designers Trainers Service Providers Vessel Owners/Operators
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
SC104: Differential Global Navigation Satellite Systems (DGNSS) SC109: Electronic Charts
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM regional Standards used in USA SC101: Digital Selective Calling marine radios SC110: Emergency Beacons SC112: Radar SC117: Electromagnetic Interference Resistance for marine radios SC119: Maritime Survivor Locating Devices
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Originally set up in 1983 to develop standards for DGPS to achieve 5 meter accuracy navigation & positioning Version 1 was replaced by Version 2, when implmentation problems turned up (1990) Version 2.1 added Real-Time Kinematic (RTK) messages to provide decimeter accuracy of short ranges (1994) Version 2.2 expanded diffrential operation to GLONASS, provided ancillary RTK messages (1998) Version 2.3 added several new messages to improve RTK, radiobeacon broadcasts, use of Loran-C (2001)
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Inefficiency of Version 2 messages led to the development of an improved format more efficient, higher integrity, and simplicity of development Version 3.0 (2004) Version 3 primariliy aimed at improving RTK, supporting networked RTK Current Working Groups: Network RTK, Internet Protocol, Coordinate Transformations, Reference Station Integrity Monitoring, GLONASS, Galileo New Proposed Working Group: Encryption
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
While the Commission was originally set up to address maritime standards, DGNSS standards are applied worldwide to land and maritime positioning systems One strength of the SC-104 Committee is that paritcipating companies benefit from world-wide standards, thus are motivated to develop them Participants include vendors, service providers and government agencies from around the world Standards are subjected to performance and interoperability testing prior to adoption and publication
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Application Layer (brief discussion) Presentation Layer (Data Field and Message Definition) Transport Layer (Message Framing, CRC) Data Link Layer (no specifications, up to service providers)
!
RTCM-NTRIP
Physical Layer (no specifications, up to service providers) Definition of Data Fields (DF) (fixed length, variable length text)
!
RTCM3.0: DF Examples
DF # DF Name DF Range DF Resolution Data Type Data Field Notes
DF003
Reference Station ID
0-4095
uint12
The Reference Station ID is determined by the service provider. Its primary purpose is to support multiple reference stations within a single data link transmission. It is also useful in distinguishing between desired and undesired data in cases where more than one service may be using the same data link frequency. The GPS L1 Pseudorange field provides the raw L1 pseudorange measurement at the reference station in meters, modulo one lightmillisecond (299,792.458 meters). The GPS L1 pseudorange measurement is reconstructed by the user receiver from the L1 pseudorange field by: (GPS L1 pseudorange measurement) = (GPS L1 pseudorange field) modulo (299,792.458 m) + integer as determined from the user receiver's estimate of the reference station range, or as provided by the extended data set. If DF012 is set to 80000h, this field does not represent a valid L1 pseudorange, and is used only in the calculation of L2 measurements.
DF009
L1 Pseudorange
0-299792.46 m
0.02m
uint24
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
RTCM3.0: MT Example
DATA FIELD Satellite ID P(Y)/CA Code Indicator Reserved L1 Pseudorange L1 PhaseRange L1 Pseudorange L1 Lock time Indicator Reserved Integer L1 Pseudorange Modulus Ambiguity (8 MSBs of Pseudorange) L1 CNR TOTAL DF # DF007 DF008 DF001 DF009 DF010 DF011 DF001 DF012 DATA TYPE uint6 bit(1) bit(1) uint24 int20 bit(3) bit(1) uint8 NO. OF BITS 6 1 1 24 20 3 1 8 NOTES
DF013
uint8
8 72
Table 3.5-3: Contents of the Satellite-Specific Portion of a Type 1002 Message, Each Satellite GPS Extended RTK, L1 Only
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Observations
MT: 1001, 1002 MT: 1003, 1004 MT: 1009, 1010 MT: 1011, 1012 MT: 1005,1006 MT: 1007,1008 MT: 1013
Station Coordinates Antenna Description Auxiliary Operation Information Supplement # 1: (to be decided in May 2006)
PhaseRange (L1,L2)
Carrier to Noise Ratio (L1,L2) [dB-Hz]
Pseudorange Smoothing Parameters (Smoothing Interval 0unlimited) Loss of Lock: Lock Time Indicator GLONASS Frequency Number
Compression Method
L1 Pseudorange Modulo 1ms (2ms GLONASS) or Full L1 Pseudorange L2 Pseudorange L1 Pseudorange (+/- 163.82 m) L1 PhaseRange L1 Pseudorange (+/- 262.143 m + Overflow) L2 PhaseRange L2 Pseudorange (+/- 262.143 m + Overflow)
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Observables
Requires Receiver (or Software) Clock Steering (+/- 100 ns) Clock Steering required, although not necessary (atomic clocks?)
Transmission of 3 or more signals (Code,Carrier,CNO) possible through combination of messages (1004,1002), but currently not allowed Pseudoranges may be smoothed or unsmoothed
!
IGS Naming Convention for Antenna Type To be changed every time a change occurs at the station that could affect the antenna phase center variations (PCV) Alphanumeric Characters, allows unique identification of individual antennas in conjunction with Antenna Descriptor
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
8 Bits Preamble 6 Bits reserved 10 Bits Message Length 0-1023 Bytes of Data
(the Messages Defined in Presentation Layer) QualComm CRC-24Q Probability of undetected errors < 2-24 for channel bit error probabilities < 0.5
24 Bits CRC
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Code (Pseudorange) Phase (Phaserange) Doppler Loss Of Lock Indicator (Lock Time) Carrier to Noise Ratio (Standardized ?) Channel Number Wavelength Factor
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Format Comparison
RTCM 3.0
Pseudorange PR Resolution Carrier Phase Carrier Phase Resoultion Wavelength Factor Doppler CNO CNO Resolution Loss of Lock Time Tag Resolution NavTime
C/A + P2(Y) or P1(Y) + P2(Y) 0.02 m LA + L2 or L1 + L2 0.5 mm L1+L2 0.25 db-Hz Lock Time 1 ms Clock Steering (100 ns)
SOC
BINEX 0x7f-00
0.001 m L1 + L2 + LA 0.0001 Cycles = 0.02 mm 0x7f-02 +
RINEX 2.2
C/A + P1 +P2 0.001 m L1 + L2 + LA 0.001 cyles = 0.2 mm + + S1,S2,SA Slip Flag 100 ns 1 ns
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
Is there need for Data Encryption ? Kinematic and Stop and Go Support More Meta-Data
Summary
!
RTCM3.0 provides GNSS Raw Data in a Compressed Format RTCM is the major GNSS Standard for Real Time Data exchange
Flexible Structure, easily extendable RTCM3.0 is a good choice for a Standardized Raw Data Format
IGS requirements not fulfilled yet, may be considered by SC104 IGS should become a member of RTCM 3 Meetings per Year
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany
IGS Workshop 2006 Perspectives and Visions for 2010 and beyond, May 8-12, 2006, ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany