4.7 Article

Levelling co-located GNSS and tide gauge stations using GNSS reflectometry

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEODESY
Volume 89, Issue 3, Pages 241-258

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00190-014-0784-y

Keywords

Reflectometry; GNSS; SNR; Levelling; Tide gauges; Site co-location

Funding

  1. FP7 Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship [330103]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT110100207]
  3. Australian Research Council [FT110100207] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The GNSS reflectometry technique provides geometric information on the environment surrounding the GNSS antenna including the vertical distance to a reflecting surface. We use sea-surface reflections of GPS signals, recorded as oscillations in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), to estimate the GNSS to tide gauge (TG) levelling tie, and thus the ellipsoidal heights of the TG. We develop approaches to isolate SNR data dominated by sea-surface reflections and to remove SNR frequency changes caused by the dynamic sea surface. Comparison with in situ levelling at eight sites reveals mean differences at the centimetre level for satellites above 12 elevation, with four sites showing differences of 3 cm or smaller. These differences include errors in the in situ levelling, in the antenna calibration model and in the TG measurements, and so represent an upper bound on our technique's error. Data sampling (1 or 30 s) does not significantly affect the results. We detect systematic errors at the decimetre level related to satellite elevations below 12 and to sea-surface height and also differences between results from the L1 and L2 GPS signals larger than 15 cm at two sites. These systematic errors remain unexplained; differences between GPS signals are attributed to receiver-dependent differences in the SNR measurements, while the elevation-dependent error is attributed to unmodelled phase effects such as those caused by tropospheric refraction and sea-surface roughness. Using our approach, we identify a levelling offset of 1.5 cm related to a TG sensor change, illustrating our technique's value for TG reference monitoring.

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