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- Richard Snay
- NOAA’s National Geodetic Survey
- CGSIC Meeting
- Long Beach, CA
- September 13, 2005
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- 1:30 CORS/OPUS: Status & Overview
- Richard Snay, NOAA’s
National Geodetic Survey
- 1:45 EarthScope’s Plate Boundary Observatory
- Greg Anderson, UNAVCO, Inc.
- 2:05 Post-Processing Versus Real-Time GNSS
- Georg Weber, German Federal
Agency for Cartography
- and Geodesy
- 2:25 The International GNSS Service—Progress Towards Real-Time
- Mark Caissy, Natural
Resources Canada
- 2:45 CORS/OPUS: Future Prospects
- Charles Schwarz, NOAA’s
National Geodetic Survey
- 3:00 Question & Answer Session
- 3:20 Break
- 3:35 Interactive Sessions within Small Discussion Groups
- 5:00 End
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3
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- Towards real-time CORS products and services
- Charles Schwarz, Miranda
Chin, and Bruce Sailer
- B. OPUS, UFCORS, and other CORS utilities
- Tom Soler, Dale Pursell, and Marti Ikehara
- C. Guidelines for establishing CORS sites
- Giovanni Sella, Don Haw, and
Julie Prusky
- D. Ionospheric & tropospheric models
- Tim Fuller-Rowell and Dru Smith
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4
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5
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- National CORS Network contains 667 sites
- Cooperative CORS Network contains 140 sites
- California CORS Network contains 350+ sites
- Combined CORS Network growing at rate of 15 sites per month
- More than 155 organizations participate in the CORS program
- Provides code range (C/A, P1, P2)
- and carrier phase observations (L1, L2)
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6
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- Postmission Static Positioning (cm-level accuracy with a few hours of
data, dm-level accuracy with one minute of data)
- Postmission Kinematic Positioning (dm-level accuracy for an aircraft,
boat, or land vehicle)
- Geophysics / Crustal Motion
- Meteorology / Water Vapor in Atmosphere
- Space Weather / Free Electrons in Ionosphere
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7
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8
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- Combined CORS network grew by more than 240 sites. (Thanks mainly to
EarthScope’s Plate Boundary Observatory and to RTK networks being
established by state and local governments.)
- Accuracy of NGS-produced orbits improved by 37.5% (4 cm à 2.5 cm).
- NOAA now using CORS data to nowcast Total Electron Content (TEC) over
CONUS every 15 minutes.
- NOAA now using CORS data operationally to nowcast precipitable water
vapor over CONUS every hour.
- NOAA now validates positional coordinates of Cooperative CORS sites
daily (previously it was done monthly).
- The Online Positioning User Service (OPUS) processed 150,000 GPS data
sets.
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- * Since November 2004, an
experimental product characterizing the ionospheric total electron
content (TEC) over CONUS has been running in real-time at NOAA’s Space
Environment Center (SEC)
- Uses a Kalman filter and ingests ground-based GPS data to produce 2-D
maps of TEC
- Product evolved from a collaboration between NOAA’s National Geodetic
Survey (NGS) and SEC
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11
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12
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- Ionospheric correction for single
frequency GPS and NDGPS positioning
- Dual-frequency integer ambiguity resolution for rapid centimeter
accuracy positioning
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- Product approved for transition to full operations in Spring 2006
- Parallel data stream from CORS-East and CORS-West will increase
reliability
- Increase number of real-time stations over CONUS by including WAAS
stations, plus stations operated by NOAA’s Forecst Systems Lab
- Include Canadian-sponsored IGS stations to improve poleward coverage
- Increase cadence to 5 minutes
- Provide short-term forecast (10 to 30 minutes) to bring up to, or just
beyond, real-time
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- Within the next 3 months
- * 15 Mexican sites will join the CORS network.
- * OPUS-DB (database) will allow users to archive their results in the
National Geodetic Survey’s database.
- * NOAA will release new guidelines for establishing CORS
- sites and managing CORS
information.
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15
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16
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- GOALS:
- Improve quality of CORS data
- Focus attention on CORS meta-data requirements
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- * Exploring the use of NTRIP to stream GPS data from selected CORS via
the Internet.
- * Developing OPUS-RS (rapid static) that will enable users to obtain
positional coordinates with cm-level accuracy using only 15 minutes of
data
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- NOAA’s National Geodetic Survey (NGS) is exploring the possibility of
streaming GPS data (not correctors) from selected Continuously Operating
Reference Stations (CORS) via the Internet.
- These data will be publicly available and free of direct user fees.
- NGS is openly distributing these data to enable other organizations to
provide location based services relative to the National Spatial
Reference System.
- Users may also apply these GPS data to
- * monitor the distribution of free electrons in the atmosphere,
- * monitor the distribution of precipitable water vapor in the
atmosphere, and
- * record the passage of seismic waves.
- While these GPS data may be applied to track the path of a moving
platform--such as an aircraft, water vessel, or land vehicle–these data
will not possess sufficient “integrity” to support a robust navigation
service.
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