The current GPS civil service
provides suitable performance only
in situations of good electromagnetic
visibility; the positioning becomes
difficult in severely signal degraded
environments, e.g. mountainous
or urban areas, where a lot of GPS
signals are blocked by buildings or
natural obstacles. The GPS gaps can
be partially solved employing spacebased
augmentations systems; in
this paper we consider geostationary
and geosynchronous constellations.
A simulation software has been
developed in MATLAB® environment
in order to study the integration of
existent and feasible constellations.
Detailed coverage analysis of a
super-constellation made up of
GPS+EGNOS+S-QZSS is presented,
based on existent GPS-EGNOS
satellites and hypothetical Shifted-
QZSS constellation over Europe.
Both systems, in different way, could
improve the main parameters that
quantify the performance of a navigation
satellite system, i.e. availability, accuracy,
continuity and integrity, but their own
constellations have different features
and different potential uses.
Fig.1: EGNOS Architecture
The used indicators,
to compare
the various
satellites
configurations,
are the VSN
(Visible
Satellites
Number)
and GDOP
(Geometric
Dilution Of
Precision),
which represent
the quality of
positioning;
suchparameters are computed for a single
observer and global observers grid,
particularly in Europe. A statistical
analysis is also introduced in order to
obtain meaningful results. Moreover
we will define a Service Area.
Background
EGNOS is the European SBAS (Satellite
Based Augmentation systems), it has been
developed by the ESA in co-operation
with the European Commission and
Eurocontrol. The system is made up
of 3 segments (Fig.1): Space segment,
Ground segment, User segment. In this
paper we are focused on space segment,
which is composed by already existing
GPS constellation and 3 geostationary
satellites broadcasting WAD (Wide Area
Differential) corrections and integrity
informations. Geostationary satellites
also broadcast GPS-like signal that
should improve the satellites geometry.
EGNOS already works, but is under
final phase of testing and will be declare
operative (as system) during 2008.
QZSS (Quasi Zenith Satellite System)
is a joint program of the JAXA and a
consortium of Japanese industries; QZSS is
a space-based positioning system, designed
to be a GPS augmentation on urban and
mountainous areas of Japan. The first
QZSS satellite will be launched in 2009.
QZSS is composed by a Space Segment,
a Ground Segment and a user segment.
The Space Segment consists of three
geosynchronous satellites that move on
three identical Higly-inclined Elliptical
Orbits (HEO) with coincident 8-shaped
ground tracks centred on 135°E meridian.
QZSS constellation is planned to have
always at least one satellite near zenith
over Japan, so that users can receive
signals without obstructions in “urban canyons” and mountainous areas.


Fig.2: S-QZSS satellites heights and sky-plot (observer at Naples)
In order to do such simulation we use a
constellation obtained by ideally shifting
the QZSS constellation on Europe,
changing only central longitude of ground
trace (15°E). We call the simulated
constellation “Shifted-QZSS” or S-QZSS
to distinguish it from the original one. The
main features that resumes the S-QZSS
constellation are shown in figures 2-3-4.
The constellation is conceived to have
at least one S-QZSS satellite always
visible at elevation angle more than
75° from service area; SV at elevation
angles of 70°-80° is usually visible for
observers placed in urban canyons.

Fig.3: Shifted-QZSS orbital parameters

Fig.4: S-QZSS ground tracks
Coverage analysis
We want to examine the worldwide
and European coverage, provided
by GPS and EGNOS and S-QZSS
augmentation. For this purpose we
have developed a simulation software
in MATLAB® environment, resumed
in the block diagram in Fig.5.
Inputs are GPS and EGNOS Rinex
navigation files, which contain the daily
broadcast ephemerides. Rinex data, related
to 02/16/2008, were stored by a Septentrio
PolaRx2 receiver placed near Naples.
The algorithm first block deals with the
extraction and selection of GPS/EGNOS
satellites ephemerides from Rinex files.
The selected ephemerides and the
theoretic S-QZSS orbital parameters
are the inputs of an orbit propagator,
which updates the ephemerides at
observation epoch. The satellites
ECEF coordinates, outputs of orbital
propagator, are transformed in the
local ENU coordinates and then in
elevation and azimuth relative to
the observer. In the last block of
the software, VSN and GDOP are
computed for a given mask angle.
The software can
work in two ways:

Fig.5: Software block diagram