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Inverse spiking filter based acquisition enhancement in software based global positioning system receiver
Author(s) -
G. Arul Elango,
G. Sudha,
Bastin Francis
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
applied computing and informatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.665
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 2634-1964
pISSN - 2210-8327
DOI - 10.1016/j.aci.2014.02.002
Subject(s) - computer science , global positioning system , gps signals , gps/ins , filter (signal processing) , real time computing , assisted gps , time to first fix , inverse filter , signal (programming language) , noise (video) , algorithm , inverse , computer vision , telecommunications , mathematics , geometry , image (mathematics) , programming language
The lower visibility of the satellite in the acquisition stage of a GPS receiver under worst noisy situation leads to reacquisition of the data and thereby takes a longer time to obtain the first position fix. If the impulse noise affects the GPS signal, the conventional ways of acquiring the satellites do not guarantee to meet the minimum requirement of four satellites to find the user position. The performance of GPS receiver acquisition can be improved in the low SNR level using inverse spiking filtering technique. In the proposed method, the estimate of the desired GPS L1 signal corrupted by impulse noise (gn) is obtained by the prediction error filter (hopt), which is the optimum inverse filter that reshapes the noisy signal (yn) into a desired GPS signal (xn). In the proposed method, to detect the visible satellites under weak signal conditions the traditional differential coherent approach is combined with the inverse spiking filter method to increase the number of visible satellites and to avoid the reacquisition process. Montecarlo simulation is carried out to assess the performance of the proposed method for C/N0 of 20 dB-Hz and results indicate that the modified differential coherent method effectively excises the noise with 90% probability of detection. Subsequently tracking operation is also tested to confirm the acquisition performance by demodulating the navigation data successfully

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