Abstract

Abstract. Open sea and inland waterways are the most widely used mode for transporting goods worldwide. It is the International Maritime Organization (IMO) that defines the requirements for position fixing equipment for a worldwide radio-navigation system, in terms of accuracy, integrity, continuity, availability and coverage for the various phases of navigation. Satellite positioning systems can contribute to meet these requirements, as well as optimize marine transportation. Marine navigation usually consists of three major phases identified as Ocean/Coastal/Port approach/Inland waterway, in port navigation and automatic docking with alert limit ranges from 25 m to 0.25 m. GPS positioning is widely used for many applications and is currently recognized by IMO for a future maritime navigation. With the advancement in autonomous GPS positioning techniques such as Precise Point Positioning (PPP) and with the advent of new real-time GNSS correction services such as IGS-Real-Time-Service (RTS), it is necessary to investigate the integrity of the PPP-based positioning technique along with IGS-RTS service in terms of availability and reliability for safe navigation in maritime application. This paper monitors the integrity of an autonomous real-time PPP-based GPS positioning system using the IGS real-time service (RTS) for maritime applications that require minimum availability of integrity of 99.8 % to fulfil the IMO integrity standards. To examine the integrity of the real-time IGS-RTS PPP-based technique for maritime applications, kinematic data from a dual frequency GPS receiver is collected onboard a vessel and investigated with the real-time IGS-RTS PPP-based GPS positioning technique. It is shown that the availability of integrity of the real-time IGS-RTS PPP-based GPS solution is 100 % for all navigation phases and therefore fulfil the IMO integrity standards (99.8 % availability) immediately (after 1 second), after 2 minutes and after 42 minutes of convergence time for Ocean/Coastal/Port approach/Inland waterway, in port navigation and automatic docking, respectively. Moreover, the misleading information is about 2 % for all navigation phases that is considered less safe is not in immediate danger because the horizontal position error is less than the navigation alert limits.

Highlights

  • The maritime navigation accuracy requirements for radionavigation systems such as GPS are specified by the International Maritime Organization (IMO)

  • This paper investigates the integrity of an autonomous real-time Precise Point Positioning (PPP)-based GPS positioning system using the International GNSS Service (IGS) real-time service (RTS) for maritime applications that require a reliable positioning system according the IMO integrity standards

  • Afterwards, the Horizontal Protection Level (HPL) was estiBmated using least square residual method that is explained in section 3 and the Horizontal Position Error (HPE) was estimated as the horizontal position error differences of the the real-time IGS-RTS PPP-based GPS solution when compared against reference Real-time kinematic (RTK)-based GPS solution

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The maritime navigation accuracy requirements for radionavigation systems such as GPS are specified by the International Maritime Organization (IMO). El-Diasty and Elsobeiey (2015) investigated the accuracy of PPP-based positioning technique along with IGS-RTS service for maritime navigation and concluded that the real-time IGS-RTS PPPbased GPS solution fulfils IMO requirements at 95 confidence level for maritime applications with an accuracy requirement range from 10 m for ocean/coastal/port approach/inland waterways navigation to 1.0 m for in port navigation but cannot fulfil the automatic docking application with an accuracy requirement of 0.10 m. This paper investigates the integrity of an autonomous real-time PPP-based GPS positioning system using the IGS real-time service (RTS) for maritime applications that require a reliable positioning system according the IMO integrity standards. The integrity of the real-time IGS-RTS PPP-based GPS solution is investigated when IMO integrity parameters requirements for ocean/coastal/port approach/inland waterways, in port navigation and the automatic docking application are considered

REAL-TIME IGS-RTS PPP-BASED METHOD
INTEGRITY ANALYSIS
FIELD SYSTEM TEST
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
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