Detailed Signal Analysis Without a Dish: A GPS IIF L5 Signal Case Study

J. York, J. Little, O. Caldwell, S. Nelsen

Abstract: This paper explores a premise that, with appropriate application of Digital Signal Processing techniques, much of the detailed signal analysis typically associated with a dish can instead be done with a standard low-gain GNSS antenna. To do so, the signals of the recently launched GPS IIF satellites are examined, with particular attention on the L5 signal. Notably, using a high-quality non-directional GNSS antenna, we demonstrate observations of: (1) signal bandpass and dispersive characteristics,(2) chip shape, (3) eye and constellation diagrams, and (4) millisecond-level transient events. Such observations are enabled by use of the computationally efficient GNSS Complex Ambiguity Function (GCAF) technique developed by the authors and documented in open academic literature. The methods used to process the GCAF data to produce these results are discussed in detail, with careful attention to the limitations of the techniques. Qualitative comparisons are made to similar dish-based measurements found in open literature.
Published in: Proceedings of the 2012 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation
January 30 - 1, 2012
Marriott Newport Beach Hotel & Spa
Newport Beach, CA
Pages: 221 - 261
Cite this article: York, J., Little, J., Caldwell, O., Nelsen, S., "Detailed Signal Analysis Without a Dish: A GPS IIF L5 Signal Case Study," Proceedings of the 2012 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Newport Beach, CA, January 2012, pp. 221-261.
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