Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain

Attitude determination using double-differenced GNSS carrier phase measurements is studied. A realistic stochastic model is employed to take the correlations among the double-differenced measurements into full consideration. Two important issues concerning iteratively solving the nonlinear least-squ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baowei Chen, Guobin Chang, Shengquan Li, Kailiang Deng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:Mathematical Problems in Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/7908675
id doaj-3c6ddec08bbf4a0481622d99883f6900
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3c6ddec08bbf4a0481622d99883f69002020-11-24T22:43:58ZengHindawi LimitedMathematical Problems in Engineering1024-123X1563-51472019-01-01201910.1155/2019/79086757908675Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement DomainBaowei Chen0Guobin Chang1Shengquan Li2Kailiang Deng3Acoustic Science and Technology Laboratory, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin 150001, ChinaSchool of Environmental Science and Spatial Informatics, China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou 221116, ChinaAcoustic Science and Technology Laboratory, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin 150001, ChinaTianjin Institute of Hydrographic Surveying and Charting, Tianjin 300061, ChinaAttitude determination using double-differenced GNSS carrier phase measurements is studied. A realistic stochastic model is employed to take the correlations among the double-differenced measurements into full consideration. Two important issues concerning iteratively solving the nonlinear least-squares attitude determination problem are treated, namely, the initial guess and the iteration scheme. An analytical and sub-optimal solution is employed to provide the initial guess. In this solution, the orthogonal and determinant constraints among the elements of the direction cosine matrix (DCM) of the attitude are firstly ignored, and hence a relaxed 3×3 matrix is estimated using the linear weighted least-squares method. Then a mathematically feasible DCM, i.e., orthogonal and with +1 determinant, is extracted from the relaxed matrix estimate, optimally in the sense of minimum Frobenius norm. This analytical initial guess estimation method can be used for all feasible cases, including some generated ones, e.g., the case with only 3 antennas and only 3 satellites, subject possibly to some necessary, yet minor modifications. In each iteration, an error attitude, whose DCM is parameterized using the Gibbs vector, is introduced to relate the previously estimated and the true DCM. By linearizing the measurement model at the zero Gibbs vector, the least-squares estimate of the Gibbs vector is obtained and then used to correct the previously estimated DCM. By repeating this process, the truly least-squares estimate of the attitude can be achieved progressively. These are in fact Gauss-Newton iterations. For the final estimate, the variance covariance matrix (VCM) of the attitude estimation error can be retained to evaluate or predict the estimation accuracy. The extraction of the widely used roll-pitch-yaw angles and the VCM of their additive estimation errors from the final solution is also presented. Numerical experiments are conducted to check the performance of the developed theory. For the case with 3 2-meter long and orthogonally mounted baselines, 5 visible satellites, and 5-millimeter standard deviations of the carrier phase measurements, the root mean squared errors (RMSE) of the roll-pitch-yaw angles in the analytical solution are well below 0.5 degrees, and the estimates converge after only one iteration, with all three RMSEs below 0.2 degrees.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/7908675
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Baowei Chen
Guobin Chang
Shengquan Li
Kailiang Deng
spellingShingle Baowei Chen
Guobin Chang
Shengquan Li
Kailiang Deng
Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain
Mathematical Problems in Engineering
author_facet Baowei Chen
Guobin Chang
Shengquan Li
Kailiang Deng
author_sort Baowei Chen
title Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain
title_short Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain
title_full Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain
title_fullStr Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain
title_full_unstemmed Analytical and Iterative Solutions to GNSS Attitude Determination Problem in Measurement Domain
title_sort analytical and iterative solutions to gnss attitude determination problem in measurement domain
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Mathematical Problems in Engineering
issn 1024-123X
1563-5147
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Attitude determination using double-differenced GNSS carrier phase measurements is studied. A realistic stochastic model is employed to take the correlations among the double-differenced measurements into full consideration. Two important issues concerning iteratively solving the nonlinear least-squares attitude determination problem are treated, namely, the initial guess and the iteration scheme. An analytical and sub-optimal solution is employed to provide the initial guess. In this solution, the orthogonal and determinant constraints among the elements of the direction cosine matrix (DCM) of the attitude are firstly ignored, and hence a relaxed 3×3 matrix is estimated using the linear weighted least-squares method. Then a mathematically feasible DCM, i.e., orthogonal and with +1 determinant, is extracted from the relaxed matrix estimate, optimally in the sense of minimum Frobenius norm. This analytical initial guess estimation method can be used for all feasible cases, including some generated ones, e.g., the case with only 3 antennas and only 3 satellites, subject possibly to some necessary, yet minor modifications. In each iteration, an error attitude, whose DCM is parameterized using the Gibbs vector, is introduced to relate the previously estimated and the true DCM. By linearizing the measurement model at the zero Gibbs vector, the least-squares estimate of the Gibbs vector is obtained and then used to correct the previously estimated DCM. By repeating this process, the truly least-squares estimate of the attitude can be achieved progressively. These are in fact Gauss-Newton iterations. For the final estimate, the variance covariance matrix (VCM) of the attitude estimation error can be retained to evaluate or predict the estimation accuracy. The extraction of the widely used roll-pitch-yaw angles and the VCM of their additive estimation errors from the final solution is also presented. Numerical experiments are conducted to check the performance of the developed theory. For the case with 3 2-meter long and orthogonally mounted baselines, 5 visible satellites, and 5-millimeter standard deviations of the carrier phase measurements, the root mean squared errors (RMSE) of the roll-pitch-yaw angles in the analytical solution are well below 0.5 degrees, and the estimates converge after only one iteration, with all three RMSEs below 0.2 degrees.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/7908675
work_keys_str_mv AT baoweichen analyticalanditerativesolutionstognssattitudedeterminationprobleminmeasurementdomain
AT guobinchang analyticalanditerativesolutionstognssattitudedeterminationprobleminmeasurementdomain
AT shengquanli analyticalanditerativesolutionstognssattitudedeterminationprobleminmeasurementdomain
AT kailiangdeng analyticalanditerativesolutionstognssattitudedeterminationprobleminmeasurementdomain
_version_ 1725693584252862464