The Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS): Positioning, Velocities,
and Reflections
Abstract
Since the inception and realization of the Global Positioning System
(GPS) in the 1970-1980s, the Global Satellite Navigation System (GNSS)
has become a ubiquous tool in civil, business, and scientific life.
Major breakthroughs in our understanding of dynamic Earth processes were
only achievable through this precise positioning technology. While
positioning is the chief objective of the system, the nature of its
design requires satellite signals to traverse the ionosphere and the
troposphere, and results in signal reflections off the ground. In
addition to crustal dynamics, this enables the study of the atmosphere
and local environmental sensing, impacting fields far beyond solid earth
research, including space physics, atmospheric science, glaciology,
hydrology, and natural hazards. In this paper I review some of the
history of this technology and its impact on the Earth sciences. Using
the example of GPS, I introduce how satellite positioning systems work
and how we can infer precise positions from the signals broadcast by the
satellites. For this, I give an overview on reference systems, different
observation models, the predominant precise positioning strategies and
how the various error terms can be corrected. Once a solid understanding
of precise positioning is developed , I present some of the
complications that arise in high-rate (1 or more sample per second
observations) sub-daily and real-time kinematic positioning, which is of
great utility in the characterization and monitoring of many natural
hazards. GNSS enables observations beyond precise positioning. I provide
background and observation models for instantaneous velocity
estimations, useful in real-time applications particularly where precise
orbits and intial positions are not available, and GNSS reflectometry,
which allows to perform local environmental sensing around GNSS
monuments, including the inference of snow depth or tidal heights.
Throughout the paper, each method is illustrated by a number of
applications either from the literature or novel work. The focus is on
some highlights from the last 1 2 Ronni Grapenthin decade of geodetic
work, with a clear slant towards examples from solid Earth and
hydrologic research.