Abstract

The optimized design of the spreading modulation technique is considered to be the major way to achieve both spectrum compatibility and performance improvement. To allow a variety of signals to share the limited frequency band of GNSS and further improve the signals’ ranging accuracy and anti-interference performance, several new spreading modulation techniques have been proposed in recent years. In this chapter, we will introduce a variety of typical spreading modulation techniques such as BPSK with rectangular chips (BPSK-R), binary offset carrier (BOC), binary coded symbol (BCS), composite BCS (CBCS), time-multiplexed BOC (TMBOC), composite BOC (CBOC), quadrature multiplexed BOC (QMBOC), as well as alternative BOC (AltBOC). The processing ambiguity threat of BOC and MBOC signals and possible solutions are also discussed. Considering that in the next-generation GNSS implementations, new requirements and new constraints will constantly emerge and new modulation methods will be needed, this chapter is not meant to be regarded as a review of the development of navigation signal modulation technology, or an interpretation of the signal formats being used by several major satellite navigation systems. Instead, we regard the spreading modulations used in satellite navigation signals as general techniques and focus our discussion on the principles of these modulation techniques and the design ideas behind their generation processes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call