New Galileo service set to deliver 20 cm accuracy (2024)

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24/01/202327823 views213 likes

ESA /Applications /Satellite navigation

Galileo’s capabilities have grown with the addition of a new High Accuracy Service, freely available worldwide to anyone with a suitably equipped receiver. Delivering horizontal accuracy down to 20 cm and vertical accuracy of 40 cm, the High Accuracy Service is enabled through an additional level of real-time positioning corrections, delivered through a new data stream within the existing Galileo signal.

Following months of testing by ESA engineers at the ESTEC technical centre in the Netherlands, Galileo’s High Accuracy Service (HAS) was officially declared available to users at the European Space Conference in Brussels, Belgium, today.

“Galileo is not standing still,” remarks Javier Benedicto, ESA Director of Navigation. “This new High Accuracy Service offers a new dimension of precision to everyone who needs it, while the Open Service Navigation Message Authentication – already available – allows users to authenticate Galileo signals as they make use of it, to minimise any risk of spoofing. And an upgraded integrity message of the signalrolled out last year reduces the time to first fix while enhancing the overall robustness of Galileo.

“ESA’s role is to oversee such fundamental upgrades to the Galileo system, working in conjunction with Galileo’s service providerEUSPA, the EU Agency for the Space Programmme, and its owner, the European Union. Further service improvements will come with the launch of the remaining Galileo satellites, followed later this decade by Galileo Second Generation.”

The new HAS correction message is embedded within the ‘E6’ band of the Galileo signal – typically not accessed via smartphones and other mass-market products but only through high-end receivers. However this message is also being made available through the internet, opening the prospect of wider adoption by connected devices, and its development into the Open Service standard in years to come.

Already the world's best

Europe’s Galileo system – comprising a 28-satellite constellation to date and a worldwide ground segment – is already the world’s most precise satellite navigation service, with its Open Service offering metre-scale accuracy. The European Union and ESA went into partnership to develop Galileo, with ESA as its technical authority – this year the Agency celebrates the 30th anniversary of its first satellite navigation research.

EUSPA is targetingthis new Galileo servicetowards current high-precision applications such as precision agriculture, resource prospecting, land and hydrographic surveys as well as emerging sectors such as robotics, autonomous driving of automobiles, trains, ships and drones and augmented reality gaming and marketing – even formation flying of satellites.

“With this new High Accuracy Service, Galileo becomes the first constellation able to provide a high-accuracy service globally and directly through the signal in space and via internet,” comments Rodrigo da Costa, Executive Director of EUSPA. “This new feature for Galileo will foster innovation in many downstream sectors.”

Keeping Galileo on track

The basic principle behind Galileo is simple. The satellites in space transmit signals incorporating a highly-precise time measurement, exact to a few billionths of a second. A receiver picks up signals from four (or more) Galileo satellites and measures the time it took for each signal to reach it. It then converts these time values into distance by multiplying the figures by the speed of light. The receiver then cross-checks the distances from all satellites to pinpoint its location on (or above) Earth’s surface.

But in practice both the orbits of the satellites themselves and the onboard atomic clocks that keep time for the signals are prone to drift. And the signals can experience varying levels of slight delay due to interference from the ‘ionosphere’ – an electrically active segment of Earth’s atmosphere.

So to keep the system on track, a global network of Galileo Sensor Stations performs continuous monitoring of the satellites and their signals. Their data is used to compile a set of corrections which are then uplinked to the Galileo satellites to be incorporated into their navigation signals every 100 minutes or so.

Think of Galileo as a single planetary-scale clock, designed to be sufficiently accurate that it identifies and highlights any errors that build up over time.

Faster corrections for sharper precision

The new HAS further improves on this performance through the use of a High Accuracy Data Generator based at the GNSS Service Centre in Madrid, Spain, generating additional corrections for Galileo as well as US GPS satellites. These corrections are then relayed to compatible receivers in real time through the Galileo satellite signal – compiled into a single message of 448 bits per second, a unique capability of the carefully-engineered Galileo signal shape.

“Compared to the Galileo Open Service, the corrections are made available very rapidly and very often – with an update for satellite orbits every 30 seconds and for satellite clocks every 10 seconds,” explains ESA’s Galileo System Performance Engineer Daniel Blonksi. “And the HAS correction message is designed in such a way that suitable receivers can benefit from multiple satellites broadcasting it, to reconstruct the overall message very fast.”

The new high-accuracy service is envisaged as having two service levels. Service Level 1, already available, corrects satellite orbit and clock errors as well as internal signal ‘biases’ unique to each satellite in the constellation that, once known, can enable still higher precision through direct comparisons of their signal phase.

Service Level 2, intended for roll out across Europe,will combine these with additional ionospheric corrections, made possible by the use of additional ground stations for which ESA is preparing the needed infrastructure upgrades.

About Galileo

Galileo is currently the world’s most precise satellite navigation system, serving more than three billion users around the globe.

The Full Operational Capability phase of the Galileo programme is managed and funded by the European Union. The European Commission, ESA and EUSPA (the EU Agency for the Space Programme) have signed an agreement by which ESA acts as design authority and system development prime on behalf of the Commission and EUSPA as the exploitation and operation manager of Galileo/EGNOS. “Galileo” is registered as a trademark in the database of the European Union Intellectual Property Office (n° 002742237).

Galileo: finding our way
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New Galileo service set to deliver 20 cm accuracy (2024)

FAQs

What is the accuracy of Galileo? ›

The Galileo system has a greater accuracy than GPS, having an accuracy of less than 1 m when using broadcast ephemeris (GPS: 3 m) and a signal-in-space ranging error (SISRE) of 1.6 cm (GPS: 2.3 cm) when using real-time corrections for satellite orbits and clocks.

Is Galileo High accuracy Service operational? ›

On 24 January 2023, the European Union declared the Galileo High Accuracy Service (HAS) operational for testing, and it is scheduled to become fully operational in 2024.

How accurate is Galileo in meters? ›

Galileo Open Service Performances
Galileo Open Service (positioning & timing)
Single Frequency (SF)Dual Frequency (DF)
CoverageGlobal
Accuracy (95%)Horizontal: 15 mHorizontal: 4m
Vertical: 35 mVertical: 8m
4 more rows
Nov 20, 2023

What is the estimated level of accuracy of the clock onboard Galileo satellites? ›

The passive hydrogen maser clock is the master clock on board each satellite. It is an atomic clock which uses the ultra stable 1.4 GHz transition in a hydrogen atom to measure time to within 0.45 nanoseconds over 12 hours.

What is the most accurate GPS service? ›

Galileo is currently the world's most precise satellite navigation system, serving more than three billion users around the globe. The Full Operational Capability phase of the Galileo programme is managed and funded by the European Union.

What is more accurate, GPS Glonass or Galileo? ›

High Accuracy: Galileo is designed to provide very high accuracy, up to one meter for its commercial service, which is superior to that of GPS and GLONASS for civilian use.

Can an iPhone use Galileo? ›

Apple's iPhone and Apple Watch can use the US GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, QZSS, and BeiDou systems. GPS satellites send signals at different frequencies, called bands. There are several bands that GPS satellites can transmit on, depending on the system.

Why will Galileo be better than GPS? ›

By placing satellites in orbits at a greater inclination to the equatorial plane than GPS, Galileo will achieve better coverage at high latitudes. This will make it particularly suitable for operation over northern Europe, an area not well covered by GPS.

Who owns Galileo GPS? ›

Galileo is four times more accurate than GPS providing 1 meter accuracy and a broad range of services. Galileo is fully funded and owned by the European Union and unlike other GNSSs it is under civilian control.

What frequency does Galileo use? ›

Galileo signals have codes

All the satellites transmit at the same frequency, that is, the Galileo signal at L1 is broadcast at 1575.42 MHz from any satellite.

How accurate is GPS to 1 meter? ›

That is, 95–98% of the time, it will plot a point within one meter of the true point. In the second image, the receiver has sub-meter accuracy with 50% precision, i.e., the points fall within the meter radius 50% of the time.

Can anyone use Galileo? ›

Yes, Galileo's services are available worldwide with no restrictions on the use of its signal in any place on the planet (unless local governments prohibit access to specific services).

How accurate is Galileo? ›

Galileo HAS delivers horizontal accuracy down to 20 cm and vertical accuracy of 40 cm in nominal use conditions, according to ESA. The service is transmitted directly via the Galileo signal in space (E6-B) and through the internet.

Do GPS and Galileo work together? ›

Galileo is fully interoperable with GPS , and with other GNSS programmes. The combined use of Galileo and other GNSS brings many benefits to the end user.

How much did the Galileo GPS cost? ›

According to various published reports, the European Galileo satellite navigation system will cost between 3.5 to 4 billion euros (US$4.5–5.2 billion.)

What did Galileo discover that disproved? ›

Galileo's lunar observations refuted Ptolemaic perfection. More significantly, it showed that the moon was a world like Earth, complete with mountains and valleys. Galileo's second discovery was that the Milky Way was made up of uncountable stars invisible to the unaided eye.

Is Galileo the inventor of the telescope True or false? ›

They were made famous by an Italian professor and experimenter named Galileo Galilei in the summer of 1609 at the University of Padua near Venice. While Galileo did not invent the telescope, he did design and build telescopes with increasingly higher magnifying power for his own use and to present to his patrons.

What is the world's most precise satellite navigation system? ›

Galileo is currently the world's most precise satellite navigation system, serving over four billion smartphone users around the globe since entering Open Service in 2016. All smartphones sold in the European Single Market are now guaranteed Galileo-enabled.

How accurate is satellite positioning? ›

On the basis of satellite signals, the receiver can define its position anywhere in the world with an accuracy of a few metres in less than a minute. In addition, the time can be defined as a by-product with an accuracy of approximately one hundred nanoseconds.

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