Estimation and exclusion of multipath range error for robust positioning

  • Authors:
  • Tatsuya Iwase;Noriyoshi Suzuki;Yusuke Watanabe

  • Affiliations:
  • ITS Laboratory, Toyota Central R&D Laboratories, Inc., Nagakute, Japan 480-1192;ITS Laboratory, Toyota Central R&D Laboratories, Inc., Nagakute, Japan 480-1192;ITS Development Department, Denso Corporation, Kariya, Japan 448-8661

  • Venue:
  • GPS Solutions
  • Year:
  • 2013

Quantified Score

Hi-index 0.00

Visualization

Abstract

In integrated systems for accurate positioning, which consist of GNSS, INS, and other sensors, the GNSS positioning accuracy has a decisive influence on the performance of the entire system and thus is very important. However, GNSS usually exhibits poor positioning results in urban canyon environments due to pseudorange measurement errors caused by multipath creation, which leads to performance degradation of the entire positioning system. For this reason, in order to maintain the accuracy of an integrated positioning system, it is necessary to determine when the GNSS positioning is accurate and which satellites can have their pseudorange measured accurately without multipath errors. Thus, the objective of our work is to detect the multipath errors in the satellite signals and exclude these signals to improve the positioning accuracy of GNSS, especially in an urban canyon environment. One of the previous technologies for tackling this problem is RAIM, which checks the residual of the least square and identifies the suspicious satellites. However, it presumes a Gaussian measurement error that is more common in an open-sky environment than in the urban canyon environment. On the other hand, our proposed method can estimate the size of the pseudorange error directly from the information of altitude positioning error, which is available with an altitude map. This method can estimate even the size of non-Gaussian error due to multipath in the urban canyon environment. Then, the estimated pseudorange error is utilized to weight satellite signals and improve the positioning accuracy. The proposed method was tested with a low-cost GNSS receiver mounted on a test vehicle in a test drive in Nagoya, Japan, which is a typical urban canyon environment. The experimental result shows that the estimated pseudorange error is accurate enough to exclude erroneous satellites and improve the GNSS positioning accuracy.