Nominal GPS Signal Deformations: 10 years of WAAS Signal Quality Monitoring

R. Eric Phelts, Todd Walter, Rhiannon Sanchez

Peer Reviewed

Abstract: Approximately 10 years of continuous WAAS signal quality monitoring (SQM) measurements have been collected. Numerous changes to the GPS satellite constellation, WAAS ground system, and user receiver configurations have occurred during that time. A number of anomalous signal deformation events have also been cataloged on L1 since 2009. Despite these various changes, WAAS SQM data can be used to assess the stability and evolution of nominal signal deformations of the L1 C/A code signals from the GPS satellites. In addition, the more recent availability of L5 SQM data and the addition of GPS Block III SVs allows comparisons to the original L1 algorithm and predictions for future nominal L5 characteristics. It is shown that WAAS SQM measurements remain sensitive to changes in nominal signal deformations. Also, while the limits of nominal deformations appear quite stable and signal anomalies tend to be rare, unexpected events can and do occur. Finally, though GPS Block III SVs have dissimilar signal characteristics to previous block types, the maximum nominal range biases on L1 continue to be well-bounded by the threat model and minimum range error limits required to guarantee integrity for single-frequency WAAS aviation users. It is anticipated this will hold true for future dual-frequency WAAS users as well.
Published in: Proceedings of the 2022 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation
January 25 - 27, 2022
Hyatt Regency Long Beach
Long Beach, California
Pages: 374 - 388
Cite this article: Phelts, R. Eric, Walter, Todd, Sanchez, Rhiannon, "Nominal GPS Signal Deformations: 10 years of WAAS Signal Quality Monitoring," Proceedings of the 2022 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Long Beach, California, January 2022, pp. 374-388. https://doi.org/10.33012/2022.18257
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