Abstract

Ambiguity resolution (AR) is a fundamental problem for carrier phase based signal processing tasks to leverage the superhigh precision of wavelength-level range and velocity measurements. With the elaborately designed waveform and coordinated running of the space-based satellite system, the antenna-array observations of global navigation satellite system (GNSS) signals feature a phase measurement model. In this article, the AR of baseline estimation with GNSS carrier phase measurements only in the AR step is examined from an array signal processing perspective. The array-geometry-aided ambiguity resolution approach, coined as AGAR, is proposed for growing the baseline estimation provided by a search-free algorithm to the accuracy of the aperture level in an effective way. First, the single-epoch and search-free $2q$-order AR method is further investigated in size and statistical independence. Second, the conventional phase beampattern is defined to characterize the similarity of carrier phase measurement vector of signals from different directions. Third, a simple and effective ambiguity-lookup-table approach after the conventional phase beampattern is proposed which fulfills the goal of baseline growing to the array aperture level. Fourth, the identifiability, success rate, Cramér–Rao bound (CRB), and computation complexity are analyzed. As a result, the phase-based and complex-based processings are distinguished, resulting in an alternative analytical prediction of outlier probability that well approximates AR’s success rate. The relationship between the success rate of AR and CRB is also clarified. Numerical simulations are carried out to verify the proposed analytical prediction and AR approach. The AR success rate increased from 10% to 93% at a relatively large measurement error of 0.05 cycle.

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