Position, Navigation, and Timing Technologies in the 21st Century. Группа авторов

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Position, Navigation, and Timing Technologies in the 21st Century - Группа авторов

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are the receiver’s and the i‐th BTS clock bias, respectively; and images and images are the receiver’s and the i‐th BTS clock drift, respectively.

      Assuming the receiver to be moving with velocity random walk dynamics, the system’s dynamics after discretization at a uniform sampling period T can be modeled as

      (38.4)equation

equation

      where images is a discrete‐time zero‐mean white noise sequence with covariance Q = diag [Qpv, Qclk]. Defining images and images to be the power spectral densities of the acceleration in the x− and y− directions, Qpv and Qclk are given by

      Note that in many practical situations, the receiver is coupled with an inertial measurement unit (IMU), which can be used instead of the statistical model to propagate the estimator’s state between measurement updates from BTSs [44, 45]. This is discussed in more detail in Section 38.9.

      To establish and maintain a connection between cellular CDMA BTSs and the UE, each BTS broadcasts comprehensive timing and identification information. Such information could be utilized for PNT. The sequences transmitted on the forward link channel, that is, from BTS to UE, are known. Therefore, by correlating the received cellular CDMA signal with a locally generated sequence, the receiver can estimate the TOA and produce a pseudorange measurement. This technique is used in GPS. With enough pseudorange measurements and knowing the states of the BTSs, the receiver can localize itself within the cellular CDMA environment.

      This section is organized as follows. Section 38.5.1 provides an overview of the modulation process of the forward link channel. Section 38.5.2 presents a receiver architecture for producing navigation observables from received cellular CDMA signals. Section 38.5.3 analyzes the precision of the cellular CDMA pseudorange observable. Section 38.5.4 shows experimental results for ground and aerial vehicles navigating with cellular CDMA signals.

      38.5.1 Forward Link Signal Structure

      Cellular CDMA networks employ orthogonal and maximal‐length pseudorandom noise (PN) sequences in order to enable multiplexing over the same channel. In a cellular CDMA communication system, 64 logical channels are multiplexed on the forward link channel: a pilot channel, a sync channel, 7 paging channels, and 55 traffic channels [46]. The following sections discuss the modulation process of the forward link and give an overview of the pilot, sync, and paging channels from which timing and positioning information can be extracted. Models of the transmitted and received signals are also given.

      38.5.1.1 Modulation of Forward Link CDMA Signals

equation equation

      where D is the delay operator. It is worth noting that an extra zero is added after the occurrence of 14 consecutive zeros to make the length of the short code a power of two.

Schematic illustration of the forward link modulator.

      Source: Reproduced with permission of IEEE.

      38.5.1.2 Pilot Channel

      The message transmitted by the pilot channel is a constant stream of binary zeros and is spread by Walsh code zero, which also consists of 64 binary zeros. Therefore, the modulated pilot signal is nothing but the short code, which can be utilized by the receiver to detect the presence of a CDMA signal and then track it. The fact that the pilot signal is data‐less allows for longer integration time. The receiver can differentiate between the BTSs based on their pilot offsets.

      38.5.1.3

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