Abstract

Comparisons between different global navigation satellite system (GNSS) signals and GNSS-reflectometry (GNSS-R) satellite systems can provide valuable suggestions for future development of the GNSS-R instrument and signal processing method. This article evaluates the ocean altimetry performance of multiple GNSS constellation signals using raw intermediate frequency data collected by Cyclone GNSS (CYGNSS) and TechDemoSat-1 (TDS-1) satellites. Data used for the evaluation include observations of GPS L1, Galileo E1, and BDS B1 band signal. The specular point position and the ground-truth bistatic delay are calculated through the HALF method. After ionospheric, tropospheric, and tide corrections, the sea surface height can be retrieved; and then the height is compared with the DTU18 mean sea surface model derived one. Based on the GNSS-R satellite-collected observations, an optimal incoherent integral duration is determined. By making use of the optimal duration, the CYGNSS-based ranging delay estimating accuracy can reach up to 2.38 m, 1.98 m, and 1.91 m for GPS, Galileo and BDS, respectively; and the TDS-1 based one can reach up to 5.46 m and 3.84 m for GPS and Galileo, respectively. The results can provide suggestion on the strategies of multi-constellation observations fusion to improve the altimetry accuracy.

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