If you wish to contribute or participate in the discussions about articles you are invited to contact the Editor

RTK Systems

From Navipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search


FundamentalsFundamentals
Title RTK Systems
Author(s) GMV
Level Basic
Year of Publication 2011
Logo GMV.png


There are DGNSS techniques used by high-precision navigation/surveying applications, based on the use of carrier phase measurements. This is the case of the Real Time Kinematics (RTK), where the differential GNSS measurements are computed in real-time by specific GNSS receivers if they receive a correction signal using a separate radio receiver. When referring to GPS in particular, the system is also commonly referred to as Carrier-Phase Enhancement, CPGPS.

Most of the currently available RTK receiver systems use double-differenced GPS and/or GLONASS carrier phase measurements to determine the position of the roving receiver. The typical nominal accuracy for dual- frequency systems is 1 centimetre ± 2 ppm (horizontal) and 2 centimetres ± 2 ppm (vertical). The latency for position outputs varies from less than 20 ms to 100 ms for different receiver systems. If the receiver works in the synchronised RTK mode, the latency depends, of course, on the latency of the radio data link. The position accuracy drastically decreases if the double-differenced ambiguities are not resolved or are resolved incorrectly. In the latter case, errors in the order of one metre can easily occur. Therefore, reliable ambiguity fixing is probably the most important design aspect for an RTK system. All other error sources - such as unmodeled atmospheric effects, (carrier) multipath, orbital errors, or receiver measurement noise - are of the order of several millimetres up to a few centimetres.

RTK Systems

Network RTK

When the RTK systems began to operate (around 2000), they used a single base station receiver and a number of mobile units. The base station re-broadcasts the phase of the carrier that it measured, and the mobile units compare their own phase measurements with the ones received from the base station, following the RTK Standards.

This allows the mobile units to calculate their relative position to millimeters, although their absolute position is accurate only to the same accuracy as the position of the base station. A single reference station set-up within up to 20-30 km is typically required if a user is operating in baseline mode. Otherwise the performance, accuracy, and with some systems the reliability of user's RTK is degraded.

Over the last few years, permanent reference station installations have emerged in many countries. This is quite appealing, since in areas with considerable GPS surveying activity, a number of users might share the infrastructure and the associated costs. Some of the installations are operated by companies and provide a service to the surveying community. Installations can be just:

  • single reference stations,
  • a number of single reference stations,
  • or networking reference stations.

Then, RTK systems have evolved to the integration of several reference stations into a combined network RTK that provides benefits for the user by improving the accuracy and increasing the overall user system performance. For the reference station operator, networking reduces the number of stations that are needed to provide a given level of accuracy to the rover users. These permanent reference station networks are requiring real-time communication to a networking computation center and real-time estimation of biases between reference stations.

A key factor of success is the distribution of the information generated within the networking computation center to the roving user in the field. Some of the installations are relying on proprietary computation algorithms and possibly formats and restricting themselves with the field equipment. However, in general it is in the interest of service providers to supply the service for more than a single type of RTK field equipment. Therefore, the detailed understanding of the supplied information such as applied corrections or the way of processing is absolutely mandatory.

Today, installations are supplying the information basically in two ways:

  • the so-called FKP-approach (FKP stands for the German word of spatial correction parameter);
  • the VRS approach (Virtual Reference Station).

Both approaches deliver observations that are supposed to be operational with modern RTK equipment. However, the ways the computational algorithms running at the networking computation center are proprietary, FKP is property of Geo++ and VRS of Trimble. The VRS GNSS RTK is the dominant Network RTK technique today (around 95%). Optimal interoperability is not guaranteed, since the definition and an interface mechanism is missing. While the roving user equipment might work optimally with one vendor's networking software providing a service, it might have degraded performance with another vendor's software. Within RTCM Special Committee No. 104 (SC104), the Network RTK working group developed the standardized way of interfacing between networking reference stations and roving field users, that has been incorporated in RTCM 10403.1. This standard incorporates GPS Network Corrections, which enable a mobile receiver to obtain accurate RTK information valid over a large area. The Network RTK correction information provided to a rover can be considered as interpolated corrections between the reference stations in the RTK network.

Notes


References