Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 2)

nbul 2004 
  
li] 
server 
invia al client 
— 
ct, uses a 
streaming 
plications, 
he former 
s the true 
)ermanent 
'er on the 
; to it the 
st, a free 
ing media 
chitecture 
ers (even 
signed to 
listing all 
in supply 
the client 
Id system 
'er" GPS 
software 
mn whose 
1e); then, 
d | starts 
receiver 
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV. Part B2. Istanbul 2004 
  
  
Permanent Station 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Receiver 
Y 
PC 
NTRIP DGGI 
Server Server 
RTCM RTCM 
1/3/16/18/19/31 1/31 
  
  
  
  
  
  
Figure 3. Scheme of The Permanent Station with the RTCM 
Servers 
3. THE CLIENT/ROVER 
3.1 Client Architecture 
The client is based on a GPS receiver, which can be of geodetic 
class (if a sub-decimeter precision is required) or hand-held (if 
|-meter precision is enough). In the former case the RTK or 
DGPS mode will be used, in the latter the DGPS mode only. 
3.2 Client for the RTK Tests 
The first solution is based on a Javad-Topcon GPS+GLONASS 
L1L2 geodetic receiver with a LegAnt antenna. The receiver can 
apply code and phase differential corrections, having a 
RTK/OTF positioning engine with centimetric precision. The 
receiver is connected to a notebook PC, in turn connected to the 
Internet by a GSM-GPRS modem. The built-in RTK engine can 
operate in “delayed” or “extrapolated” mode. In “delayed” 
mode, the observations are processed regardless of the 
correction latency time, by using an internal buffer storing up to 
6 observations preceding the current one (based on the rover 
time), waiting to receive from the “base” a correction with the 
same time tag. This positioning mode (which could be defined 
"near-real-time") produces spatially precise positions, like the 
ones obtained from post-processing, but temporally delayed by 
a time equal to the latency of the corresponding corrections. If 
the latency is over 6 seconds, a single-point solution is 
produced. The current rover position can be improved by 
adding a trajectory model which allows to bring the position up 
to date. As the latency time increases, so decreases the precision 
of the coordinates. There is no precision loss for static-type 
positioning, thus this mode is better suited for topographic 
applications, such as "stop-and-go" surveys, where the operator 
can stop on a point until the receiver fixes the position with a 
adequate precision. 
The "extrapolated" mode is useful for navigation and real-time 
precision positioning, rather than topographic applications. In 
this mode the RTK engine tries to extend the validity of the 
previous corrections, by using the range rate correction and 
extrapolating the correction (or observation) up to the current 
time tag. The advantage of this mode is having an up-to-date 
position (the determined position at every time is the current 
one according to the receiver time), but less precise spatially. 
The positioning precision depends on the decorrelation in time 
of the observations, so to a greater latency corresponds a lesser 
precision. Beyond a certain latency (usually 15 seconds), the 
RTK engine is no longer able to fix the ambiguities, which 
remain in "float" state. In this mode, the NMEA output from the 
receiver reports the latency of each correction, giving a way to 
evaluate the quality of the coordinates. In “extrapolated” mode, 
better results are reached if the receiver can use the RTCM 20 
and 21 messages, rather than 18 and 19, due to the better 
temporal stability of the phase range corrections when 
compared with the raw data. 
3.3 Client for the DGPS Tests 
The DGPS tests were carried out with GPS+GLONASS 
recciver Legacy/E Topcon (the same model used at the 
permanent station) with a LegAnt 2 antenna; we also used an 
iPAQ hand-held PC with GPRS mobile phone for the Internet 
connection, and a Compaq Presario notebook PC with the 
ArcView-ArcTracking software to display real-time path. 
Tests on DGPS were also performed using a Trimble 
GeoExplorer hand-held GPS receiver with an integrated 
Windows CE computer. The receiver works in DGPS mode 
and the corrections can come from an external station in RTCM 
format, or directly from the WAAS system. Internet-based 
corrections are downloaded by an iPaq hand-held PC with 
GSM-GPRS modem card, and sent to the GeoExplorer through 
a serial cable connection. The ESRI ArcPad GPS software runs 
directly on the GeoExplorer. 
4. FIELD TESTS 
4.1 RTK Tests 
RTK tests with the receiver in static postion were planned both 
in “delayed” and “extrapolated” modes, at various distances 
from the master station; the former with the purpose of testing 
the infrastructure quality, the latter in order to measure the 
latency of the corrections. Distances from the permanent station 
were fixed at (about) 10 m, 3 km, 6 km, and 15 km. In order to 
avoid differences in satellite configurations, all tests were 
scheduled at almost the same time every day. The transmission 
media used for all tests was the Internet (via GSM and GPRS 
mobile connections); for the 10 m test we also used a direct 
Ethernet connection (within the same LAN as the server station) 
for comparison. The systems for broadcasting the corrections 
over the network were the NrripServer with the RTCM 3/18/19 
messages, and the DGGI server with two RTCM message sets: 
3/18/19 and 3/20/21. Table 1 collects all tests planned for this 
experimentation, not all of which were actually performed. The 
experiments used a receiver-specific routine to compare the 
three components of the actual base-rover baseline (obtained 
from a 1-hour static survey) with those computed in RTK mode 
during the tests. If the difference on each component falls under 
6 cm, the position is considered correct. Each test comprised a 
set of at least 30 fixings, where the RTK engine was 
reinitialized after each fixing. 
| Client/Server — [Ntrip | DGGI — | Modem - 
| Lan - Ethernet 18/19 | 18/19, 20/21 
| GPRS - Internet | 18/19 | 18/19, 20/21 
GSM - Internet 18/19 | 18/19, 20/21 
| Modem 18/19, 
| 20/21 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Table 1. Planned Tests 
 
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.