Abstract

Cooperative positioning (CP) utilises information sharing among multiple nodes to enable positioning in Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)-denied environments. This paper reports the performance of a CP system for pedestrians using Ultra-Wide Band (UWB) technology in GNSS-denied environments. This data set was collected as part of a benchmarking measurement campaign carried out at the Ohio State University in October 2017. Pedestrians were equipped with a variety of sensors, including two different UWB systems, on a specially designed helmet serving as a mobile multi-sensor platform for CP. Different users were walking in stop-and-go mode along trajectories with predefined checkpoints and under various challenging environments. In the developed CP network, both Peer-to-Infrastructure (P2I) and Peer-to-Peer (P2P) measurements are used for positioning of the pedestrians. It is realised that the proposed system can achieve decimetre-level accuracies (on average, around 20 cm) in the complete absence of GNSS signals, provided that the measurements from infrastructure nodes are available and the network geometry is good. In the absence of these good conditions, the results show that the average accuracy degrades to meter level. Further, it is experimentally demonstrated that inclusion of P2P cooperative range observations further enhances the positioning accuracy and, in extreme cases when only one infrastructure measurement is available, P2P CP may reduce positioning errors by up to . The complete test setup, the methodology for development, and data collection are discussed in this paper. In the next version of this system, additional observations such as the Wi-Fi, camera, and other signals of opportunity will be included.

Highlights

  • Positioning in Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)-denied/challenged indoor/outdoor and transitional environments remains one of the most challenging problems due to the presence of various objects that generally reflect and disperse signals used for positioning, and affect the network geometry and data availability

  • This campaign aimed to explore Cooperative positioning (CP) of different platforms in GNSS-denied/challenged environments, in this paper, we mainly focused on pedestrian CP navigation in a GNSS-denied environment

  • The test set-ups for the Ultra-Wide Band (UWB)-based CP system in the different test scenarios have proved that they are suitable and practicable

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Summary

Introduction

Positioning in Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)-denied/challenged indoor/outdoor and transitional environments remains one of the most challenging problems due to the presence of various objects that generally reflect and disperse signals used for positioning, and affect the network geometry and data availability. Such environments and situations require new robust approaches for positioning that mitigate some of these challenges. Compared to distributed architectures, centralised ones offer improved accuracy but at the cost of increased communication and processing requirements

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