Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator

One of the major problems currently facing satellite-based positioning is the atmospheric refraction of the GPS signal caused by the troposphere. The tropospheric effect is much more pronounced at the equatorial region due to its hot and wet conditions. This significantly affects the GPS signal due...

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Main Authors: Donasabe Dodo, Joseph, Yahya, Mohd. Hafiz, Kamaruddin, Md. Nor
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/7706/1/ICAST2007.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/7706/
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spelling my.utm.77062017-09-10T04:19:59Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/7706/ Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator Donasabe Dodo, Joseph Yahya, Mohd. Hafiz Kamaruddin, Md. Nor T Technology (General) GN Anthropology One of the major problems currently facing satellite-based positioning is the atmospheric refraction of the GPS signal caused by the troposphere. The tropospheric effect is much more pronounced at the equatorial region due to its hot and wet conditions. This significantly affects the GPS signal due to the variability of the refractive index, which in turn affects the accuracy of GPS positioning, especially in the height components. This paper presents a study conducted in Malaysia located at the equatorial region, to investigate the impact of tropospheric delay on GPS height variation. Five GPS reference stations forming part of the Malaysian real-time kinematic GPS network (MyRTKnet) in Johor were used. RINEX data from these stations were integrated with GPS and ground meteorological data observed from a GPS station located at the Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM), at varying antenna heights for each session of observation in four campaigns with each campaign lasting for three days. A computer program called TROPO.exe was developed based on Saastamoinen tropospheric model. The result shows variations in the height component of GPS measurement with a maximum value of 119.100 cm and a minimum value of 37.990 cm. Similarly, the results show that, the tropospheric delay is a distance-dependent error, which varies with changes in meteorological condition. Furthermore, result of simulated data shows decrease in tropospheric delay with increase in antenna height. 2007 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/7706/1/ICAST2007.pdf Donasabe Dodo, Joseph and Yahya, Mohd. Hafiz and Kamaruddin, Md. Nor (2007) Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator. In: International Conference on Adaptive Structures and Technologies (ICAST 2007), 10-12 December 2007, Accra, Ghana.
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic T Technology (General)
GN Anthropology
spellingShingle T Technology (General)
GN Anthropology
Donasabe Dodo, Joseph
Yahya, Mohd. Hafiz
Kamaruddin, Md. Nor
Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
description One of the major problems currently facing satellite-based positioning is the atmospheric refraction of the GPS signal caused by the troposphere. The tropospheric effect is much more pronounced at the equatorial region due to its hot and wet conditions. This significantly affects the GPS signal due to the variability of the refractive index, which in turn affects the accuracy of GPS positioning, especially in the height components. This paper presents a study conducted in Malaysia located at the equatorial region, to investigate the impact of tropospheric delay on GPS height variation. Five GPS reference stations forming part of the Malaysian real-time kinematic GPS network (MyRTKnet) in Johor were used. RINEX data from these stations were integrated with GPS and ground meteorological data observed from a GPS station located at the Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM), at varying antenna heights for each session of observation in four campaigns with each campaign lasting for three days. A computer program called TROPO.exe was developed based on Saastamoinen tropospheric model. The result shows variations in the height component of GPS measurement with a maximum value of 119.100 cm and a minimum value of 37.990 cm. Similarly, the results show that, the tropospheric delay is a distance-dependent error, which varies with changes in meteorological condition. Furthermore, result of simulated data shows decrease in tropospheric delay with increase in antenna height.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Donasabe Dodo, Joseph
Yahya, Mohd. Hafiz
Kamaruddin, Md. Nor
author_facet Donasabe Dodo, Joseph
Yahya, Mohd. Hafiz
Kamaruddin, Md. Nor
author_sort Donasabe Dodo, Joseph
title Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
title_short Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
title_full Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
title_fullStr Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
title_full_unstemmed Investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
title_sort investigation on the impact of tropospheric delay on gps height variation near the equator
publishDate 2007
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/7706/1/ICAST2007.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/7706/
_version_ 1643644834886451200
score 13.154949