DocumentCode :
3274351
Title :
Analysis of air traffic control systems interference impact on Galileo aeronautics receivers
Author :
De Angelis, Massimiliano ; Fantacci, Romano ; Menci, Simone ; Rinaldi, Claudio
Author_Institution :
AMS-Alenia Marconi Syst., Italy
fYear :
2005
fDate :
9-12 May 2005
Firstpage :
585
Lastpage :
595
Abstract :
A GNSS receiver (GPS, Galileo) operating in a civil aircraft is exposed to the signals transmitted from ATC (air traffic control) surveillance sensors, aeronautical navigation systems and other non-aeronautical systems. The present study aims to investigate Galileo E5/L5 in-band and out-of-band interference due to some ATC systems (primary and secondary radars, and VOR, DME, ILS, and TACAN Navaids), in terms of SNR and accuracy degradation. We performed the analysis through both a theoretical approach and a simulations activity. Through the theoretical approach, we analyzed the interference effects expressing the results in terms of SNR degradation as a function of the aircraft-ATC systems distance. We discovered that if the GNSS receiver is covered within 3 dB beam width by the ATC system antenna, the interference in not negligible. For this reason, we analyzed the pulse blanking mitigation technique that is able to blank the interference with a negligible GNSS SNR degradation. In addition, exploiting the CNIT (National Interuniversity Telecommunication Consortium) Galileo simulator, opportunely modified, we analyzed the effects of the radar/Navaids interferences in terms of degradation of Galileo positioning accuracy, either with and without the mitigation process. The simulation activity has been performed considering a scenario closer to a real one, of an aircraft approaching Roma-Fiumicino airport. Both the theoretical analysis and the simulation activity is highlighted and the DME system effects on Galileo receivers could be disruptive without the application of the mitigation technique. The latter technique blanks all the interference effects with a simple algorithm and a limited increase in receiver complexity.
Keywords :
aircraft; radar receivers; radar signal processing; radiofrequency interference; Galileo aeronautics receiver; aeronautical navigation system; air traffic control systems interference; aircraft; in-band interference; nonaeronautical systems; out-of-band interference; primary radar; pulse blanking mitigation technique; secondary radar; surveillance sensor; system antenna; Aerospace control; Air traffic control; Aircraft navigation; Analytical models; Degradation; Global Positioning System; Interference; Satellite navigation systems; Sensor systems; Surveillance;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Radar Conference, 2005 IEEE International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8881-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/RADAR.2005.1435897
Filename :
1435897
Link To Document :
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