OPUS : Online Positioning User Service

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Presentation transcript:

OPUS : Online Positioning User Service

WHAT IS OPUS? On-line Positioning User Service Fast & easy access to the NSRS (National Spatial Reference System) for GPS users

Areas Covered by OPUS

How Does OPUS Work? Data submitted through NGS web page Processed automatically with NGS computers & software Position with respect to 3 suitable CORS (or IGS sites if 1) no NAD 83 positions are available and 2) the host country has an agreement with NGS. In these international cases, ITRF coordinates only are returned, and there are no state plane or US grid coordinates Solution via (usually in minutes)

OPUS Guidelines Dual-frequency data (L1/L2) Minimum 2 hrs of data (maximum 48— only cross midnight once) No kinematic or L1 only (OPUS-GIS Proposed) No Glonass. Galileo will be discussed as the constellation becomes available Accurate height requires:  correct antenna type  correct antenna height

How Does OPUS Compute Position? 3 single baselines computed 3 positions averaged — simple mean (equal weights) Differences between positions include any errors in CORS coordinates

Time-series plots, 60-day and long-term web page 60-day time series Long-term time series The time series plots provide a means of evaluating the small changes in position of a CORS.

How Does OPUS Pick Base Stations? 1.Estimate position for remote station 2.Compute distance to every available CORS 3.Sort CORS by increasing distance 4.Select the 5 closest CORS 5.Look at 1 st 3 CORS with TEQC program. Criteria: ● data cover time span for remote station ● > 80% of data available ● low multipath ● if not, replace with 4 th CORS (then 5 th ) 6. Start single baseline solutions using 1 st 3 CORS ● check solution quality ● if bad solution, replace CORS with 4 th (then 5 th )

CORS Selection (example = CORV solved from CHZZ, NEWP, P376)

Quick Link to OPUS from NGS Home Page

Using the OPUS Web Page

Allowable Data Formats Compressed archive of multiple files. Archive must contain RINEX “site123h.04o” or Hatanaka “site123h.04d” Compressed individual files.“Site123h.zip”must contain “site123h.06o” or “site123h.06d” Manufacturer’s native / raw (binary) —uncompressed--as long as UNAVCO’s teqc program can process it RINEX Receiver Independent Exchange-- uncompressed

Select or exclude base stations including Cooperative CORS Select state plane coordinate zone Extended Output Set user profile Associate antenna type, antenna height, SPC code, selected base stations and extended option choices with your address

FILE: corv o NOTE: Antenna offsets supplied by the user were zero. Coordinates 1008 returned will be for the antenna reference point (ARP) NGS OPUS SOLUTION REPORT ======================== USER: DATE: January 13, 2006 RINEX FILE: corv059f.05o TIME: 19:08:14 UTC SOFTWARE: page master3.pl START: 2005/02/28 05:00:00 EPHEMERIS: igs13121.eph [precise] STOP: 2005/02/28 06:59:30 NAV FILE: brdc n OBS USED: 4228 / 4314 : 98% ANT NAME: ASH700936B_M NONE # FIXED AMB: 25 / 29 : 86% ARP HEIGHT: 0.0 OVERALL RMS: 0.013(m) REF FRAME: NAD_83(CORS96)(EPOCH: ) ITRF00 (EPOCH: ) X: (m) 0.018(m) (m) 0.018(m) Y: (m) 0.021(m) (m) 0.021(m) Z: (m) 0.024(m) (m) 0.024(m) LAT: (m) (m) E LON: (m) (m) W LON: (m) (m) EL HGT: (m) 0.034(m) (m) 0.034(m) ORTHO HGT: (m) 0.043(m) [Geoid03 NAVD88] UTM COORDINATES STATE PLANE COORDINATES UTM (Zone 10) SPC (3601 OR N) Northing (Y) [meters] Easting (X) [meters] Convergence [degrees] Point Scale Combined Factor US NATIONAL GRID DESIGNATOR: 10TDQ (NAD 83) BASE STATIONS USED PID DESIGNATION LATITUDE LONGITUDE DISTANCE(m) AH2489 NEWP NEWPORT CORS ARP N W AJ6959 CHZZ CAPE MEARS CORS ARP N W DH4503 P376 EOLARESVR_OR2004 CORS ARP N W NEAREST NGS PUBLISHED CONTROL POINT AH2486 CORVALLIS CORS ARP N W OPUS Output Standard

USER: DATE: January 13, 2006 RINEX FILE: corv059f.05o TIME: 19:08:14 UTC SOFTWARE: page master3.pl START: 2005/02/28 05:00:00 EPHEMERIS: igs13121.eph [precise] STOP: 2005/02/28 06:59:30 NAV FILE: brdc n OBS USED: 4228 / 4314 : 98% ANT NAME: ASH700936B_M NONE # FIXED AMB: 25 / 29 : 86% ARP HEIGHT: 0.0 OVERALL RMS: 0.013(m) Reading OPUS Output The version of PAGES software used for processing The antenna type you selected and height of antenna reference point height you entered. Confirm that these are correct. The ephemeris used (OPUS will use the best available): “igs” final post-fit orbit--better than 1 cm (10-14 days wait) “igr” rapid post-fit orbit--better than 2 cm (17 hours wait) “igu” ultra-rapid predicted orbit--better than 20 cm (available immediately) Navigation file used Your address & observation file. Solution run date & time

USER: DATE: January 13, 2006 RINEX FILE: corv059f.05o TIME: 19:08:14 UTC SOFTWARE: page master3.pl START: 2005/02/28 05:00:00 EPHEMERIS: igs13121.eph [precise] STOP: 2005/02/28 06:59:30 NAV FILE: brdc n OBS USED: 4228 / 4314 : 98% ANT NAME: ASH700936B_M NONE # FIXED AMB: 25 / 29 : 86% ARP HEIGHT: 0.0 OVERALL RMS: 0.013(m) Start & end dates & times of your file Ratio and % of observations used in solution Ratio and % of fixed/total ambiguities Overall RMS of the solution Reading OPUS Output con’t.

Guidelines for Good Solution  Make sure antenna type and height are correct  Review statistics: at least 90% of observations should be used OBS USED: 4228 / 4314 : 98% at least 50% of the ambiguities should be fixed # FIXED AMB: 25 / 29 : 86% overall RMS should seldom exceed m OVERALL RMS: 0.013(m)  In case of bad statistics, try choosing different CORS and re-submit.

REF FRAME: NAD_83(CORS96)(EPOCH: ) ITRF00 (EPOCH: ) X: (m) 0.018(m) (m) 0.018(m) Y: (m) 0.021(m) (m) 0.021(m) Z: (m) 0.024(m) (m) 0.024(m) LAT: (m) (m) E LON: (m) (m) W LON: (m) (m) EL HGT: (m) 0.034(m) (m) 0.034(m) ORTHO HGT: (m) 0.043(m) Reference frames. Epochs Position, xyz Peak-peak errors, xyz (range, max-min) Peak-peak errors may vary between NAD83 & ITRF Orthometric ht. is based on current geoid model Reading OPUS Output con’t. Solution/Coordinates [Geoid03 NAVD88] Position, lat / long / eh / oh Peak-peak for lat/long etc

How Does OPUS Compute Errors? EW S N 1 σ standard deviation peak-to-peak error more conservative ~ 2 σ peak-to-peak distances

UTM COORDINATES STATE PLANE COORDINATES UTM (Zone 10) SPC (3601 OR N) Northing (Y) [meters] Easting (X) [meters] Convergence [degrees] Point Scale Combined Factor US NATIONAL GRID DESIGNATOR: 10TDQ (NAD 83) Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinates State Plane coordinates (if requested) US National Grid OPUS Output con’t. Grid Coordinates

BASE STATIONS USED PID DESIGNATION LATITUDE LONGITUDE DISTANCE(m) AH2489 NEWP NEWPORT CORS ARP N W AJ6959 CHZZ CAPE MEARS CORS ARP N W DH4503 P376 EOLARESVR_OR2004 CORS ARP N W NEAREST NGS PUBLISHED CONTROL POINT AH2486 CORVALLIS CORS ARP N W This position and the above vector components were computed without any knowledge by the National Geodetic Survey regarding the equipment or field operating procedures used. READING OPUS OUTPUT (control) Disclaimer Base Stations--NAD83 position--distance away The closest published station in the NGS data base In case you didn’t know it was there

How Can I Improve My Results? Consider observing a longer session Data sets of at least four hours have been shown to produce more reliable results Avoid conditions that perturb the GPS signal— unsettled weather, solar flares, multipath (nearby reflective surfaces)

Distribution of Horizontal Offset from Accepted Values 0.8 cm N-S RMS 1.4 cm E-W RMS > 200 CORS 2 hours of data

Distribution of Vertical Offset from Accepted Values 1.9 cm RMS All mean offsets < 1 mm > 200 CORS 2 hours of data

Error Messages and Warnings Resolution of the example messages below depends on circumstances. If there is a problem with software or hardware on the NGS side, sometimes just re-submitting the data file later is successful. If there is a problem with your data file, reobservation may be necessary. The time span of the submitted dataset is too short. OPUS needs a minimum of two hours worth of data to begin processing. The dataset submitted to OPUS does not meet the RINEX standard. Please re-submit the data in RINEX 2.0 or 2.1 standard. Aborting... The dataset submitted to OPUS contained too many data gaps or a large number of sampling interval changes. Aborting... WARNING! No antenna type selected. An antenna pattern will not be applied. The observations to slip ratio is too low. There were an unusually high number of cycle slips in the dataset. Aborting... ERROR! Opus terminated abnormally in one of the processing modules.

How do I get help? Study the Guidelines under “Using OPUS” Submit specific questions, comments or suggestions using “Contact OPUS” link Study the answers under “FAQs”

How to find the cause of 75% of OPUS failures

Download TEQC from UNAVCO.org

Error example – blank line at the end of the file. Note: you will have to use the Command Prompt (to bring up: hit Start-Programs-Accessories)

RINEX file to be edited. You can use Notepad, Wordpad, or another text editor (we try to use VI – a UNIX based utility)

Recent Solutions

OPUS Extended Output

BASE STATION INFORMATION STATION NAME: newp a 10 (Newport; Newport, Oregon USA) ANTENNA: ASH700936B_M S/N=CR16197 XYZ (M) XYZ VEL (M/YR) NEU MON TO ARP (M) NEU ARP TO L1 PHASE CENTER (M) NEU ARP TO L2 PHASE CENTER (M) XYZ VEL TIMES YRS XYZ MON TO ARP XYZ ARP TO L1 PHASE CENTER XYZ L1 PHS XYZ XYZ ADJUSTMENTS XYZ NEW L1 PHS XYZ NEW XYZ NEW LLH NEW L1 PHS LLH NEW LLH NEW OPUS Extended Output: Base Station Information Each CORS has a section like the one above, with ITRF xyz coordinates computed using HTDP velocities for the epoch of the observations (mid-point of the session). Note the above CORS has a monument separate from the ARP (positions coincide but ellipsoid heights are different). Base station and antenna used Monument starting ITRF coordinates. NEU offsets ITRF XYZ at mid-pt of session ITRF lat long EH at mid-pt of session XYZ offsets and position Position offsets at mid-pt of session Velocity in XYZ. These values are usually for CORS (as they are here). The differences between initial and computed positions These values are larger for the unknown station as we will see. Time interval to multiply times velocity = decimal year at mid-pt of session minus = yrs

OPUS Extended Output: Remote Station Information The initial ITRF xyz position for the station being solved for is displayed for the mid-point of the observation time span. A similar position is obtained for the L1 phase center based on the antenna type selected. REMOTE STATION INFORMATION STATION NAME: corv 1 ANTENNA: ASH700936B_M SNOW S/N=UNKNOWN XYZ (M) NEU MON TO ARP (M) NEU ARP TO L1 PHASE CENTER (M) NEU ARP TO L2 PHASE CENTER (M) XYZ MON TO ARP XYZ ARP TO L1 PHASE CENTER XYZ L1 PHS The antenna height is here because we are solving for the Antenna Reference Point position. Typically, however, you will have entered a non-zero antenna height.

OPUS Extended Output: Remote Station cont  Final positions based on this first vector. The XYZ adjustments are the difference between the initial and final positions. XYZ L1 PHS BASELINE NAME: newp corv XYZ XYZ ADJUSTMENTS XYZ NEW L1 PHS XYZ NEW XYZ NEW LLH NEW L1 PHS LLH NEW LLH NEW Preliminary ITRF coordinates for the remote station incorporating velocities computed for mid-point of session in the previous section  Final remote station ITRF latitude, longitude and ellipsoid height for this vector. Similar for the two remaining vectors. The first of 3 baselines being solved

OPUS Extended Output: gfiles G-FILES Axx B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0595ACORVX0595ANEWP D Axx B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0595ACORVX0595ACHZZ D Axx B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0595ACORVX0595AP376 D Each of the three baselines has a section of A, B, I, C and D records. The specific record formats are listed in Bluebook Annex N, The C record contains dx, dy, dz vector components and related standard deviations. The D record contains correlations. The gfiles can be combined to do NGS-style adjustment with gfile and bfile (next slide).

OPUS Extended Output: user-constructed composite gfile Axx **first session, first vector:** B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0605ACORVX0605ANEWP D **first session, second vector:** B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0605ACORVX0605ACHZZ D **first session, third vector:** B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0605ACORVX0605AP376 D **second session, first vector:** B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X1525ACORVX1525ANEWP D **second session, second vector:** B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X1525ACORVX1525ACHZZ D **second session, third vector:** B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X1525ACORVX1525AP376 D Example of two occupations of a station. Gfile constructed by deleting all but first “Axx2005…” lines from the extended output, then appending the two baselines’ gfiles to the first one, then adding second session results to the first session. Extra lines inserted to show file structure

OPUS Extended Output: Post-fit RMS…. POST-FIT RMS BY SATELLITE VS. BASELINE OVERALL newp-corv| newp-corv| NGS’ baseline processor “PAGES” (Program for the Adjustment of GPS Ephemerides) develops statistics such as the above to aid in analyzing solution quality. In the spirit of automated processing that is fundamental to OPUS, there is no option to disable specific satellites. Each baseline has a section like the one shown above.

OPUS Extended Output: Observations summary OBS BY SATELLITE VS. BASELINE OVERALL newp-corv| newp-corv| OVERALL chzz-corv| chzz-corv| OVERALL p376-corv| p376-corv| Each baseline has a summary of the observations received from each satellite. OBS USED: 4228 / 4314 : 98% As discussed on slides 14 & 15 (Reading OPUS output, Guidelines for Good Solution), the Standard Output summarizes the total percent of observations used over all three baselines.

OPUS Extended Output: Covariance Matrices Covariance Matrix for the xyz OPUS Position (meters2) Covariance Matrix for the enu OPUS Position (meters2) Horizontal network accuracy = meters. Vertical network accuracy = meters. Additional statistics developed by PAGES for use in commercial adjustment software: Diagonal elements: Variance of x: Variance of y: Variance of z: Off-diagonal elements: Covariance of x-y: Covariance of x-z: Covariance of y-z: Similar for enu. Estimates of network accuracy. These may be optimistic here, given that peak-peak errors are in the 1-3 cm range.

OPUS Extended Output: NAD 83 quantities Derivation of NAD 83 vector components Position of reference station ARP in NAD_83(CORS96)(EPOCH: ). Xa(m) Ya(m) Za(m) NEWP CHZZ P Position of reference station monument in NAD_83(CORS96)(EPOCH: ). Xr(m) Yr(m) Zr(m) NEWP CHZZ P Velocity of reference station monument in NAD_83(CORS96)(EPOCH: ). Vx (m/yr) Vy (m/yr) Vz (m/yr) NEWP CHZZ P Vectors from unknown station monument to reference station monument in NAD_83(CORS96)(EPOCH: ). Xr-X= DX(m) Yr-Y= DY(m) Zr-Z= DZ(m) NEWP CHZZ P The above quantities are derived by transformation from similar ITRF quantities.

OPUS Extended Output: SPC—Disclaimer--End STATE PLANE COORDINATES - International Foot SPC (3601 OR N) Northing (Y) [feet] Easting (X) [feet] Convergence [degrees] Point Scale Combined Factor This position and the above vector components were computed without any knowledge by the National Geodetic Survey regarding the equipment or field operating procedures used. State Plane Coordinate quantities Disclaimer End of OPUS Extended Output. Next: example of adjusting several sessions submitted to OPUS for the same station

Files for sample adjustment Upper part of skeleton Bfile (no *25*, *27*, *70*, *72* records): *OR*HZTLOBS NGS NATIONAL GEODETIC SURVEY *10*TEST OPUS SOLUTIONS TO CORVALLIS CORS *12* JROJEFF OLSEN *13*NORTH AMERICAN DATUM-83 GRS *80*0001NEWPORT CORS ARP N W ORAA *86*0001 N88 A A *80*0002CAPE MEARS CORS ARP N W ORAA *86*0002 N88 A A (*80* and *86* records for two stations not shown) *OR* Serfil : NEWP 0001 CHZZ 0002 P CORV 0009 DDSN 0005 Upper Part of composite Gfile. Four 2-hr sessions for CORV at different times of 2005 were sent to OPUS. Vectors for one of the four sessions shown. Axx B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0605ACORVX0605ANEWP D B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0605ACORVX0605ACHZZ D B page5 v IGS NGS IFDDFX Iant_info.003 NGS C X0605ACORVX0605AP376 D Afile : CC N W 20780E DD3 II (Coordinates and EH for NEWP constrained) MM3NYfrebbk

Adjustment statistics NATIONAL GEODETIC SURVEY PROGRAM ADJUST ADJUSTMENT PROGRAM PAGE 15 VERSION 4.30 N RMS MEAN ABS CONTRIB. RESIDUAL RESIDUAL NORTH (METERS) EAST (METERS) UP (METERS) DEGREES OF FREEDOM = 24 VARIANCE SUM = STD.DEV.OF UNIT WEIGHT = VARIANCE OF UNIT WEIGHT = 9.77

Output Bfile Bfile from free adjustment : *CO*HZTLOBS NGS NATIONAL GEODETIC SURVEY *10*TEST OPUS SOLUTIONS TO CORVALLIS CORS *12* JROJEFF OLSEN *13*NORTH AMERICAN DATUM-83 GRS *80*0001NEWPORT CORS ARP N W ORAA *86*0001 N A A *80*0002CAPE MEARS CORS ARP N W ORAA *86*0002 N A A *80*0003EOLARESVR OR2004 CORS ARP N W ORAA *86*0003 N A A *80*0009CORV CORS ARP BY OPUS N W ORAA ( Pub =.91082,.51926) *86*0009 N A A ( Pub = ) *80*0005DDSN N W ORAA *86*0005 N A A *AL* (No orthometric or geoid heights computed in this example)

Example of using HTDP from NGS Tool Kit NEWP position computed for day of year 059, 2005

Recommended background reading Coordinate Systems A series of four papers about Terrestrial Reference Systems Snay, R.A. & T. Soler (1999). Part 1 - Modern Terrestrial Reference Systems. Professional Surveyor, 19(10), (1999) Snay, R.A. & T. Soler (2000). Part 2 - The evolution of NAD83. Professional Surveyor, 20(2), 16, 18.(2000) Snay, R.A. & T. Soler (2000). Part 3 - WGS 84 and ITRS. Professional Surveyor, 20(3), 24, 26, 28.(2000) Snay, R.A. & T. Soler (2000). Part 4 - Practical considerations for accurate positioning. Professional Surveyor, 20(4), (2000)

Recommended background reading

GPS dataObservation log OPUS-DB (OPUS-DataBase) description formphoto(s) NGS website: OPUS-DB NGS DATABASE NGS magic

online positioning user service OPUS US / your position your GPS data IERS geophysical models IGS satellite orbits ITRF reference frames NGS antenna calibrations NGS CORS base stations NGS geodetic toolkit NGS site information files UNAVCO teqc conversion (optional) publish in NGS database calibrated antenna type mark info (optional) JGE 2008v3 geodetic data

Report options + extended report + XML report + select state plane Share options + add to database + add to campaign Process options + set user profile + select CORS + select software

OPUS solutions meeting certain criteria and accompanied by metadata describing the site may be eligible for publication on Data Sheets from the NGS Integrated Data Base (IDB). Users submitting to the IDB must be registered with NGS to receive a user ID and password and agree to the terms of this publication. Please review the procedures for IDB submission.criteriaprocedures “ OPUS DB” (Submitting OPUS Results) The numerical criteria for an OPUS solution to be accepted for publication are: NGS calibrated GPS antenna minimum 4 hour data span minimum 70% observations used minimum 70% fixed ambiguities maximum 0.04m horizontal peak-to-peak maximum 0.08m vertical peak-to-peak

“OPUS Projects”—under long-term development OPUS files identified as belonging to a project are directed to appropriate directories Project data submission organized Reports sent to project managers Station data checked and edited as needed PAGES GPS processing accomplished ADJUST run

Demonstration Application II

CONTROLLING A BRIDGE SURVEY The accompanying slides were presented at the 2002 CORS Forum by Gary Thompson of the North Carolina Geodetic Survey.

Using OPUS to control Bridges On a typical bridge job, NCDOT Sets an azimuth pair ( ) Uses approximately 6-7 control panels ( ) Controls the site with 2 receivers

P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 TIP: B-9999 B9999-1B Place the Base Station over your first point and begin RTK survey ensuring that you are collecting Raw Data for at least 2 hours (This data will be sent to OPUS). We will now refer to this as OPUS1. Start Rover and begin setting and controlling your panels Be sure to measure to opposite Azimuth Pair point.

B9999-1B P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 TIP: B-9999 Again, Be sure to measure to opposite Azimuth Pair point. Move the Base Station over your second point and begin RTK survey ensuring that you are collecting Raw Data for 2 hours. (This data will also be sent to OPUS). We will now refer to this as OPUS2. Start Rover and begin controlling your panels from the second location. If you use one controller and name the points the same the controller will provide comparisons in the field.

Field Work is now complete. The following steps need to be taken to finish the process:

Office Process Download the Raw Data and RTK dc files Convert both blocks of raw data to RINEX format using Trimble’s utility Upload the files to: Receive the results from OPUS via in minutes

Continued... Import the dc file into Trimble Geomatics Office Update the initial base position for the first base to the coordinates provided by OPUS1 After a recompute, everything in the dc file should be corrected relative to the first base location (OPUS1)

Continued... The position for OPUS2 is only used for comparison to what was derived from OPUS1 Coordinates can now be utilized as needed

OPUS & RTK Savings to NCDOT Cell PhonesGPS ReceiversVehiclesStaff Hours Savings OPUS & RTK Static *1 2 *The cell phone listed in the OPUS & RTK surveying comparison was not used in the survey work, but was available for contacting the office.

HOW IS THE ANTENNA HEIGHT MEASURED? ARP MARK The height is measured vertically (NOT the slant height) from the mark to the ARP of the antenna. The height is measured in meters. The ARP is almost always the center of the bottom-most, permanently attached, surface of the antenna. See GPS Antenna Calibration for photo’s and diagrams that show where the ARP is on most antennas: / If the default height of is entered, OPUS will return the position of the ARP.

WHY DO I NEED THE ANTENNA TYPE? The antenna phase centers are located somewhere around here. The Antenna Reference Point (ARP) is almost always located in the center of the bottom surface of the antenna. The antenna offsets are the distance between the phase centers and the ARP If the user selects NONE as the antenna type, the offsets are set to and the antenna phase center becomes the reference You do not need to know these offsets. They are passed to the processing software through the antenna type Incorrect or missing antenna type  big vertical errors

Antenna Calibration Facility in Corbin, Virginia

Note that SV elevation and varying phase patterns affect signal interpretation differently SV 14 SV 20 Antenna Type A Antenna Type B Antenna Phase Center Variation

SV 14 SV 20 Antenna Type A Antenna Type B Different Phase Patterns Note that SV elevation and varying phase patterns affect signal interpretation differently Antenna Phase Center Variation

ELECTRONIC PHASE CENTER Elevation Angle (deg.) Phase Center Variation (mm)

Recent solutions

Files processed during even-numbered months,

Files processed during even-numbered months,

OPUS usage for one month

Total OPUS usage during 2005

ONGOING CORS RESEARCH * Exploring the use of NTRIP to stream GPS data from selected CORS via the Internet. * Developing OPUS-GIS which will process a few minutes of GPS code range data (for sub-meter accuracy) * Improving OPUS-RS (rapid static) that will enable users to obtain positional coordinates with cm-level accuracy using only 15 minutes of GPS carrier phase data

“OPUS Projects”—under long-term development OPUS files identified as belonging to a project are directed to appropriate directories Project data submission organized Reports sent to project managers Station data checked and edited as needed PAGES GPS processing accomplished ADJUST run

10 minute break Next Presentation: OPUS-Database