Abstract

The International GPS Service (IGS) has provided GPS orbit products to the scientific community with increased precision and timeliness. Many users interested in geodetic positioning have adopted the IGS precise orbits to achieve cm-level accuracy and ensure long-term reference frame stability. Currently, a differential positioning approach that requires the combination of observations from a minimum of two GPS receivers, with at least one occupying a station with known coordinates is commonly used. The user position can then be estimated relative to one or multiple reference stations using carrier phase observations and a baseline or network estimation approach. Double-differencing observations is a popular way to cancel out common GPS satellite and receiver clock errors. Baseline or network processing is effective in connecting the user position to the coordinates of the reference stations while the precise orbit virtually eliminates the errors introduced by the GPS space segment. This mode of processing has proven to be very effective and has received widespread acceptance. One drawback is that it requires that simultaneous observations be made at reference stations, with the practical constraint that involves. The following details a post-processing approach that uses un-differenced dual-frequency pseudorange and carrier phase observations along with IGS precise orbit products, for stand-alone precise geodetic point positioning (static or kinematic) with cm precision. This is possible if one takes advantage of the satellite clock estimates that are available with the satellite coordinates in the IGS precise orbit products and models systematic effects that cause cm-variations in the satellite to user range. This paper will describe the approach, summarize the adjustment procedure and specify the earth and space based models that must be implemented to achieve cm-level positioning in static mode. Furthermore, station tropospheric zenith path delays with cm-precision and GPS receiver clock estimates precise to 100 picoseconds are also obtained using this approach.

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