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GLONASS Performances

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GLONASSGLONASS
Title GLONASS Performances
Author(s) GMV
Level Basic
Year of Publication 2011
Logo GMV.png


Equivalent to the Standard Positioning Service (SPS) and the Precise Positioning Service (PPS) of GPS, GLONASS provides a standard precision (SP) navigation signal and a high precision (HP) navigation signal. These signals are sometimes also referred to as Channel of Standard Accuracy (CSA) and Channel of High Accuracy (CHA), respectively.

However, as in GPS there is Standard Positioning Service Performance and the Precise Positioning Standard, in GLONASS there is no document specifying the performances provided by each service. According to Sergey Revnivykh, the deputy head of the GLONASS Mission Control Center, a GLONASS performance document will be released in the 2012-2013 time frame.[1]

GLONASS Availability

The very low number of operational satellites in the constellation (in 2001 there were only seven satellites) along with a ground segment limited to Russian territory, have been the main reasons of GLONASS poor availability performance. The modernization of the Ground Segment, including new monitoring stations (some of them outside the Russia) and especially the increase of the number of satellites in the constellation (in the present, GLONASS constellation consists of 27 satellites in orbit although only 23 of them are operational), have led to almost worlwide coverege and 100% availability in the Russian territory.

The table included below, shows the increasing of the number of satellites and the availability performance (calculated as the percentage of time during which the condition PDOP ≤ 6 is valid at mask angles ≥ 5 deg) from the begining of 2007 to July 2011.[2]

Date Operational Satellites in constellation Integral Availability Global Integral Availability on Russian territory
2011/07/06 23 99.5 % 100 %
2011/01/01 22 99 % 100 %
2010/01/01 15 73.6 % 85.3 %
2009/01/01 16 87.4 % 96.6 %
2008/01/01 12 48 % 57.6 %
2007/01/01 9 19.2 % 26.3 %

GLONASS accuracy

One of the main objectives of the Global Navigation System (GNS) is to ensure GLONASS performance similar to GPS by the end of 2011. GLONASS traditional poorer performance was the culmination of several factors, such as, poor on board atomic clocks or less accuracy in GLONASS broadcast ephemeris.[3] The improvements carried out on the space, ground-based and user equipment segments have paid off, increasing five times the accuracy of GLONASS in the last years[4]. As it is shown in the figure on the right, in 2006 GLONASS Signal In Space Range Error (SISRE) at 1 sigma was in the order of 25 m and at the moment of this publication, July 2011, the accuracy of GLONASS is 6-7 metres, the same order as GPS.

As Anatoly Shilov said at the 5th international forum on satellite navigation yesterday, the accuracy of the Russian navigation system would have to be improved to 2-3 metres in the following years.

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