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Satellite navigation solution for the receiver's position (geopositioning) involves an algorithm. In essence, a GNSS receiver measures the transmitting time of GNSS signals emitted from four or more GNSS satellites (giving the pseudorange) and these measurements are used to obtain its position (i.e., spatial coordinates) and reception time.
The following are expressed in inertial-frame coordinates.
The solution illustrated
Essentially, the solution shown in orange, , is the intersection of light cones.
The posterior distribution of the solution is derived from the product of the distribution of propagating spherical surfaces. (See animation.)
Calculation steps
A global-navigation-satellite-system (GNSS) receiver measures the apparent transmitting time, , or "phase", of GNSS signals emitted from four or more GNSS satellites ( ), simultaneously.
GNSS satellites broadcast the messages of satellites' ephemeris, , and intrinsic clock bias (i.e., clock advance), as the functions of (atomic) standard time, e.g., GPST.
The transmitting time of GNSS satellite signals, , is thus derived from the non-closed-formequations and , where is the relativistic clock bias, periodically risen from the satellite's orbital eccentricity and Earth's gravity field. The satellite's position and velocity are determined by as follows: and .
In the field of GNSS, "geometric range", , is defined as straight range, or 3-dimensional distance, from to in inertial frame (e.g., ECI one), not in rotating frame.
The receiver's position, , and reception time, , satisfy the light-cone equation of in inertial frame, where is the speed of light. The signal time of flight from satellite to receiver is .
The above can be solved by using the bivariateNewton–Raphson method on and . Two times of iteration will be necessary and sufficient in most cases. Its iterative update will be described by using the approximated inverse of Jacobian matrix as follows:
In the field of GNSS, is called pseudorange, where is a provisional reception time of the receiver. is called receiver's clock bias (i.e., clock advance).
Standard GNSS receivers output and per an observation epoch.
The temporal variation in the relativistic clock bias of satellite is linear if its orbit is circular (and thus its velocity is uniform in inertial frame).
The signal time of flight from satellite to receiver is expressed as , whose right side is round-off-error resistive during calculation.
The geometric range is calculated as , where the Earth-centred, Earth-fixed (ECEF) rotating frame (e.g., WGS84 or ITRF) is used in the right side and is the Earth rotating matrix with the argument of the signal transit time. The matrix can be factorized as .
The line-of-sight unit vector of satellite observed at is described as: .
The above notation is different from that in the Misplaced Pages articles, 'Position calculation introduction' and 'Position calculation advanced', of Global Positioning System (GPS).
References
^ Misra, P. and Enge, P., Global Positioning System: Signals, Measurements, and Performance, 2nd, Ganga-Jamuna Press, 2006.