Title: Consensus Reference Concept
1GPS IN SITU REFERENCE SYSTEM (ISRS)
PRESENTED BY J. FACUNDO, C. BOWER,
J.FITZGIBBON NOAA/NWS
2Why do we need ISRS?
- Observing technologies taking measurements above
the surface to the Ionosphere are becoming more
dependent on GPS - COTS vendors are using a wide range of GPS
engines/techniques - NOAA/other agencies/industry require a
lower-cost/excellent performing reference system
for in situ applications aloft
3Evaluating the Performance of Upper Air GPS Data
4GPS-derived Pressure/Heights
5GPS Geopotential Height Differences vs
Hypsometric calculations
- GPS height measurements agreed on average to
within 20 m from the surface to 34 km. - At 30 km pressure sensors were in error by values
between -70m (Vaisala) up to 120m (SRS). - The pressure sensors considered were of extremely
good quality compared to earlier generations of
sensors, but were unable to provide very reliable
heights at pressures lower than 10 hPa.
6Computing Radiosonde Winds
7IN SITU (GPS) REFERENCE SYSTEM
MOBILE-ISRS IN-SITU TIME (1-sec),
POSITION VALUES SENT TO ISRS
5-METERS
LAT, LONG, HTGEOM, TIME, u, v
1-SEC
u
u
v
v
BASE STATION (LOCAL GPS)
OPUS
DUAL CORS
NGS Benchmark
ISRS
8National Geodetic Survey Benchmark
Future CORS Site
9Possible Flight-train Configuration
M-ISRS
10BLOCK DIAGRAM
BALLOON
M-ISRS
LAUNCH POINT CORRECTION
HI-RES GPS ENGINE CLOCK
403-MHz ANTENNA
TELEMETRY
ISRS GROUND SYSTEM
DUAL CORS
RECEIVER
GPS-PITS
OPUS
GPS-SIM
GRAPHICS/DISPLAY
11GPS-PITS GRAPHICS DISPLAYS
Reference Flight Path and Smoothed Wind Speed
12Position Error Profiles
13Velocity Error Profiles
14GPS SIMULATOR
TEST INSTRUMENT
GPS-SIMULATOR
GPS-PITS
15Conclusions
- GPS has become increasing critical for measuring
the upper atmosphere - Demonstrates great reliability and measurement
accuracy/precision. - In the future, new applications could be derived
directly from high-resolution in situ
GPS-computed measurements. - Can serve as an independent reference for a wide
range of legacy and new technologies. - NOAA LEADING THE WAY!