GPS phase accelerations for moving-base vector gravimetry

Abstract. For airborne gravimetry using INS and GPS, the accelerations from both systems are differenced to yield the gravity acceleration. Usually, the GPS acceleration is determined by first solving for the position of the vehicle relative to a base station and subsequently taking two time derivatives of the vertical component. An alternative method is to time-differentiate the observed phases directly, thus avoiding the cycle ambiguity problem that must be solved for positioning and that is fraught with (certainly not insurmountable) difficulties in the event of a cycle slip. Due to the largely unpredictable receiver-clock errors and the imposition of the Selective Availability degradation, doubly differenced (in space) phase accelerations are used to obtain the relative vehicle accelerations. Test results for stationary receivers show that the acceleration vector can be determined from phase accelerations to an accuracy of 1 mgal for 40-s averages. The mathematical formulation of the acceleration determination also highlights certain other advantages over traditional methods, such as the avoidance of the Eötvös correction, although a similar kind of velocity effect must be determined.