dancy. Out of different considerations the range measurement
precision of the Sercel receiver in dynamic application can be
assumed reasonably to be co= 0.006 m. This value is twice as
large as the precision obtained by a stationary receiver and
depends mainly on the velocity of the aircraft. With this as-
sumption the accuracies of the coordinates given in table 2 are
calculated (Frieß 1988).
Table 2: Estimated internal accuracy co» [m] of GPS
coordinates from least squares adjustment with
assumed range measurement accuracy of coz0.006 m
X Y Z
rms of strips 3,4,5 0.022 0.009 0.017
rms of strips 1,6,7 0.020 0.009 0.020
Comparing the estimated internal accuracies from the ARI model
in table 1 without any a priori stochastic information and from
the least squares adjustment with apriori knowledge of the
sigma naught (table 2), we note a very good agreement. It
demonstrates that the ARI model is suited to be applied for
modelling the dynamic characteristics of GPS coordinates during
a photogrammetric flight and that the results are realistic.
All subsequent evaluation of the sensor data, for example the
aerotriangulation, is based on the filtered GPS coordinates.
These filtered data with their stochastic informations are
achieved from the ARI-model. Table 3 summarizes the estimated
accuracies of the filtered coordinates and their autocorrela-
tion coefficients. It is an important result that in this exam-
ple only the correlations from one to the next point (within
0.6 sec.) remain significant.
Table 3: Accuracy criteria of filtered GPS data
Estimated accuracies ox of filtered coordinates [m]
X Y 2
rms of strips 3,4,5 0.017 0.007 0.021
rms of strips 1,6,7 0.013 0.006 0.016
Correlation coefficients of filtered data d=0.6 sec
X Y Z
r (1d) 0.46 0.69 0.52
r (2d) -0.06 0.11 720.01
r(3d) 0.06 T9715 -0.10
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