Abstract

Since the observation precision of the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) carrier phase is on the order of millimeters, if the phase ambiguity is correctly solved, while calibrating the receiver inter-frequency bias, time synchronization on the order of tens of picoseconds is expected. In this contribution, a method that considers the prior constraints of the between-receiver inter-frequency bias (IFB) and its random variation characteristics is proposed for the estimation of the between-receiver clock difference, based on the uncombined GNSS carrier phase and pseudorange observations of the zero and short baselines. The proposed method can rapidly achieve the single-difference ambiguity resolution of the zero and short baselines, and then obtain the high-precision relative clock offset, by using only the carrier phase observations, along with the between-receiver IFBs being simultaneously determined. Our numerical tests, carried out using GNSS observations sampled every 30 s by a dedicatedly selected set of zero and short baselines, show that the method can fix the between-receiver single-difference ambiguity successfully within an average of fewer than 2 epochs (interval 30 s). Then, a clock difference between two receivers with millimeter precision is obtained, achieving time synchronization on tens of picoseconds level, and deriving a frequency stability of 5 × 10−14 for averaging times of 30,000 s. Furthermore, the proposed approach is compared with the precise point positioning (PPP) time transfer method. The results show that, for different types of receivers, the agreement between the two methods is between −6.7 ns and 0.2 ns.

Highlights

  • Time synchronization plays an important role in our daily life

  • The CP time synchronization model based on the uncombined carrier phase observations of the short baseline are developed in detail, which considers the prior constraints of the between-receiver inter-frequency bias (IFB) and its random variation characteristics

  • Since the ambiguity remains constant in continuous arcs without cycle slips, the actual epoch variation of the between-receiver IFBs can be obtained by performing time difference on the biased estimates, which read as:

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Summary

Introduction

Time synchronization plays an important role in our daily life. In particular, communication systems, power grids and financial networks all rely on precise timing to achieve synchronization and operation efficiency. The estimation of between-receiver clock difference using the single-differenced GPS ionosphere-free code and phase combinations has been investigated [19] Their numerical results indicated that agreement with the two-way satellite time and frequency transfer (TWSTFT) at the level of 0.3 nanoseconds could be achieved even on transatlantic baselines. If the uncombined GNSS carrier phase observations are utilized to estimate the receiver clock difference, the results are expected to be less affected by the measurement noise and other errors It is of great significance for the application of tens of picoseconds level time synchronization.

Principles of the between-Receiver Clock Difference Estimation
Observation Equation
Prior Constraints and State Models of the between-Receiver IFBs
Parameter Estimation
Experiment Data and Processing Strategy
Data Collection
Data Processing Strategy
Results and Analysis
Temporal Variation Characteristics of the between-Receiver IFBs
Time Synchronization Precision and Frequency Stability Analysis
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Time series ofofbetween-receiver
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Summary and Conclusions
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