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The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Voi. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
immediately after the outage. For airborne applications this
means there is no longer any need to fly flat turns to avoid
signal outage. Flying a turn at 15 deg bank angle at a typical
survey speed of 150 knots, gives a turn rate of about 2 degs/sec
and a turn radius of about 2.3 km. The time to compete a 180
deg turn will take minimum of about 1.5 minutes. In contrast, if
the aircraft bank angle is not restricted, the same turn can be
made in approximately half the time and radius, simply by
banking at 30 degs instead of 15 degs. This savings means the
mission can be flown in less time (reducing fuel costs), or more
lines can be flown per mission. Furthermore, the smaller radius
of the turns also allows more flexibility for flying missions in
restricted airspace.
1.2 Applanix SmartBase
At distances greater than 20 to 30 km from a reference station,
the residual ppm error caused by the atmosphere delaying the
GNSS signals reaches a magnitude such that the correct carrier
ambiguities can no longer reliably be estimated. Hence with
traditional KAR differential GNSS processing, it is always
necessary to be within 30 km of a reference station sometime
during the mission in order to resolve the ambigutities. Once the
correct ambiguties are resolved, the aircraft can fly up to about
75 km from the nearest reference station before the magnitude
of the ppm error exceeds level required for high-accuracy
applications. For land-based applications a significant
productivity improvement in Real-Time Kinematic (RTK)
positioning has been achieved using the concept of a “Virtual
Reference Station” or VRS (Landau H., 2002), illustrated in
Figure 2. Here observables from a dedicated network of GNSS
reference stations are processed to compute the atmospheric and
other errors within the network. These are then interpolated to
generate a complete set of GNSS observations as if a reference
station was located at the rover.
Figure 2. Virtual Reference Station (VRS) Concept
There are a number of significant benefits to a VRS approach:
• the distance to the nearest reference station can be
extended well beyond 30 km
• the time to fix integer ambiguities is significantly
reduced
• the overall reliability of fixing integer ambiguities in
increased
• the cost of doing a survey is reduced by eliminating
the need to set up dedicated base stations.
• no special processing is required in the RTK engine,
as it is the case for a centralized multi-base approach
Real-time positional accuracies using a VRS approach are at the
cm RMS level anywhere within the network (Hakli P., 2004).
With the POSPac MMS software, Applanix has introduced a
post-processed version of VRS called the Applanix
SmartBase™. Based upon the industry leading Trimble®
VRS™ technology, the Applanix SmartBase software has been
optimized for large changes in altitude by the rover, and
extended to work with reference stations separated over very
large distances. With this approach it is only necessary to be
within the network and at least 70 km to the nearest reference
station to initially resolve the correct ambiguities. Once
resolved, the aircraft can then fly up to 100 km away from the
nearest station within the network, while still achieving
positioning accuracy at the 10 - 15 cm RMS level (Figure 3).
Figure 3. Applanix SmartBase Concept
The ability to accurately correct the atmospheric errors within
the network will of course depend upon the amount of
atmospheric activity during the survey, and the density of the
reference stations. Tests conducted by Applanix have shown
that it is possible to achieve better than decimeter RMS
accuracies with a sparse network of only 4 reference stations
separated by over 100 km, but the results are highly dependent
upon the particular data set. However for existing dense
networks such as the CORS network in Ohio State, the GSI
network in Japan, or in the SAPOS™ network in Germany,
where the there are literally 10’s to 100’s of stations separated
by distances of typically 50 - 70 km, the robustness improves
tremendously and the area that can be flown is virtually
limitless. The Applanix SmartBase includes a rigorous
adjustment of all the reference station antenna positions within
the selected network over an 18-24 hour period. This quality
control function ensures that all the reference station data and
coordinates are correct and consistent before the rover data is
processed. Such a concept is done routinely in land survey as
part of best practices, but has been a weak point in the aerial
mapping and survey industry. Too often data from a single
reference station or a CORS network are used without proper
quality control. Quality failures can include incorrect published
antenna coordinates, incorrect datum or poor observables, any
of which can result in accuracy and reliability failures in the
final product.
The Applanix SmartBase module together with the Applanix
IN-Fusion technology enables missions to be flown with bank
angles above 20 degs, with the only restriction that the turns be