Abstract

To upgrade the positioning accuracy, re-initialization speed, and attitude determination performance of precise point positioning (PPP) in dynamic applications, we proposed a multi-sensor fusion system consisting of four global navigation satellite systems (GNSSs), namely GPS, BDS, Galileo, and GLONASS, several low-cost inertial sensors, and an odometer. The study shows that the performance of PPP in terms of continuity, reliability, stability, and re-initialization speed improves by such a multi-sensor fusion system. This manifests itself in a significantly increased accuracy. For position solutions, compared to un-aided PPP solutions, the improvements achieved using low-cost inertial navigation system (INS) are about 36.4, 38.7, and 31.3% in the north, east, and vertical components, respectively, and the improvement using odometer are about 1.58, 0.35, and 4.32% relative to the INS-aided PPP solutions. Moreover, using the odometer can provide more than 2.1, 1.4, and 50.6% attitude improvements for roll, pitch, and heading angles compared to the attitude solutions obtained from the INS-aided PPP system. Under GNSS outage conditions, the mean position improvements using the odometer are about 2.3, 1.8, and 8.7%, with maximum increases of 74.6, 74.7, and 28.3%, and the average attitude improvements are about 4.7, 5.4, and 3.3%, with maximum increases of 36.4, 31.7, and 28.9%, respectively. This means that the odometer can enhance the performance of PPP and PPP/INS integration in challenging dynamic conditions.

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