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ITM/PTTI2019
January 28–31, 2019 Hyatt Regency Reston • Reston, VA
International Technical Meeting • Precise Time and Time Interval Systems and Applications
Onsite Program
www.ion.org
ITM/PTTI 2019 Meeting Schedule
Monday, January 28PTTI Tutorials ..........................9:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m.
Tuesday, January 29Exhibit Hall Open ...................8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.Exhibitor Hosted Breakfast ..8:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.ITM/PTTI Plenary Session .....10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.Lunch in Exhibit Hall .............12:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.Afternoon Sessions ...............1:45 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. PTTI Poster Session ...............5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, January 30Exhibit Hall Open ...................8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.Morning Sessions ..................8:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.Lunch in Exhibit Hall .............12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.Afternoon Sessions ...............1:45 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Thursday, January 31Morning Sessions ..................8:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.Awards Luncheon ..................12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. (Lunch served until 12:30 p.m.; late arrivals will not be served.)Afternoon Sessions ...............2:00 p.m. - 5:10 p.m.
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
PROGRAM OVERVIEW SPECIAL EVENTS AND GENERAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
PRE-CONFERENCE TUTORIALSPTTI Tutorial SessionsMonday, January 28
Room: Regency B9:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m.: Tutorials
12:15 p.m.–1:30 p.m. • Lunch on Your Own1:30 p.m.–5:00 p.m.: Tutorials
Must add tutorials on ITM/PTTI Registration Form. Additional Fee.
ITM/PTTI TECHNICAL SESSIONSITM TRACK A
GRAND BALLROOM EFGITM TRACK BREGENCY B
PTTI TRACKREGENCY A
Tues
day,
Janu
ary 2
9
Exhibit Hall Open 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Grand Ballroom A-D • Exhibitor Hosted Breakfast in Exhibit Hall 8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. ITM/PTTI Plenary Session Keynotes and Exhibitor Presentations, Grand Ballroom EFG
12:30 p.m.–1:45 p.m. Lunch in Exhibit Hall, Grand Ballroom A-D
1:45 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.A1: GNSS Augmentation Systems and their
Evolution
1:45 p.m. - 3:25 p.m.B1a: Advanced GNSS Signal Processing for
Challenging Environments
1:45 p.m. - 3:25 p.m.P1a: Laboratory Reports and Activities
3:55 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.B1b: GNSS Interference and Jamming Detection,
Characterization and Mitigation
3:55 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.P1b: Next Generation Clocks
5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.P1c: PTTI Poster Session
Location: Grand Ballroom Foyer
Wed
nesd
ay, J
anua
ry 30
Exhibit Hall Open 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m., Grand Ballroom A-D
8:30 a.m. - 10:05 p.m.P4a: Ground Based Time and Frequency Transfer
10:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.P4b: Alternative Techniques in Time Dissemination
12:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m. Awards Luncheon, Grand Ballroom D (Late arrivals will not be served after 12:30 p.m.)
2:00 p.m. - 5:10 p.m.A5: Navigation Methods for
Autonomous Systems
2:00 p.m. - 3:35 p.m.B5a: Modernized, Emerging and Future Core
GNSS Constellations
2:00 p.m. - 3:35 p.m.P5a: Time Scales and Algorithms
3:35 p.m. - 5:10 p.m.B5b: Next Generation Receiver and Antenna Technology
3:35 p.m. - 5:10 p.m.P5b: Timing Applications in Financial Markets
SPECIAL EVENTS AND GENERAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION
Access to Technical Papers and PresentationsQualified attendees may download copies of conference presentations and papers online for FREE by logging into the ION website at www.ion.org/itm or www.ion.org/ptti. Only presentations and papers provided to the ION by the presenting author will be available. Presentations will only be made available once the full technical paper is submitted. If a desired document is not available, we recommend you contact the author directly. Official conference proceedings will be distributed electronically in March to all eligible conference participants.
Mobile Conference Site Access the technical program, real-time attendee list, and other conference information from your mobile device. Point your mobile browser to m.ion.org.
Complimentary InternetFree wireless internet is available to attendees in all technical session rooms and meeting room lobbies.Network ID: @Hyatt_MeetingsPassword: ion2019
Photography PolicyYour presence at ITM/PTTI constitutes your agreement to be photographed, filmed, videotaped or otherwise recorded by conference management, or its agents, and your agreement that your image or voice may be distributed in print or electronic communications media without any compensation being paid to you. Video recording by participants is not allowed without written permission of ION during any portion of the conference. Photographs of copyrighted presentations are for personal use only and are not to be reproduced or distributed. Do not photograph any images labeled as proprietary. Flash photography, or any form of photography, that disturbs those around you, is prohibited.
Special Events at ITM/PTTI 2019The following special events are included in all full-conference registrations. Single day registrations include any special events taking place on the day the attendee is registered. Student and retired registrations include all meal functions located within the exhibit hall, however a ticket is required for the Thursday Awards Luncheon.
Late arrivals will not be served after 12:30 p.m.Grand Ballroom D
Special Events for Speakers/Session ChairsAll session chairs and the presenting author of both primary and alternate presentations should attend the Speakers’ Meeting (Tuesday) or Speakers’ Breakfast (Wednesday-Thursday), taking place in the Lake Anne room on the day of their presentation(s). Speaker names will be checked at the door. Please attend the Speakers’ Meeting/Breakfast only on the morning(s) of your presentation(s). If you have not already uploaded your bio in AMP, please bring a printed copy for your session chair.
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
HYATT FLOOR PLAN Second Floor Meeting Space
The Application of Frequency Stability Analysis and the Use of Time Domain Statistics for Clock and Oscillator Performance AssessmentThis tutorial will provide the information to unwrap the interpretation of clock and frequency source measurements, clock statistical characterization, and frequency stability analysis to bring about a workable understanding of clock and oscillator performance assessment for the PTTI attendee. The presentations and proceedings of the PTTI generally require an attendee to have a basic working knowledge of performance metrics such as Allan deviation and single-sideband phase noise to discern the extent of contribution to the improvement of the community’s practice.
The tutorial will use NIST Special Publication 1065, Handbook of Frequency Stability Analysis by William J. Riley as a reference, so that subsequently, the user may be familiar with its application and techniques. The tutorial will also inject the work of Victor S. Reinhardt, David A. Howe, and Patrizia Tavella to supplement the material of NIST 1065. The tutorial will demonstrate analysis of measurement data from devices such as the Chip Scale Atomic Clock, GPS disciplined composite clock, and the ultra-stable oscillators on-board the New Horizons spacecraft. The use of these devices is intended to provide illustrative working examples for the identification, characterization, and assessment of both deterministic (systematic) processes and stochastic (noise) properties.
Gregory L. Weaver is a member of the Principle Professional Staff of JHU/APL and works within the RF Engineering Group of the Space Department. He is a technologist with background in the technical and business aspects of the frequency control industry as a senior design engineer, technical manager and marketing strategist.
Atomic Clock TechnologyAtomic frequency standards provide the ultimate source of accuracy and stability for all modern communications, navigation, and time-keeping systems. Commercially-available “Industrial” atomic clocks, including cesium beam frequency standards, rubidium oscillators, and hydrogen masers, are based on technology originally developed in the 1950’s. Since that time, technology evolution and field experience have led to a level of performance and reliability that atomic clocks are now deployed throughout critical infrastructure applications. With the advent of GPS and, consequently, global availability of precision timing, new applications for precision timing have emerged, with ever increasing demands for improved precision, robustness, and portability. In parallel, we are, at present, experiencing a renaissance of atomic timekeeping, as modern techniques of atomic and laser physics have enabled new techniques for confining, interrogating, and exploiting precision atomic timing signals. This tutorial will provide an introduction to existing and emerging atomic clock technologies. The tutorial will focus on mature technologies: rubidium oscillators, cesium beam frequency standards, and hydrogen masers, as well as commercially-available chip-scale atomic clocks. Time permitting, the tutorial will address emerging atomic clock technologies: laser-cooled atoms and atomic fountains, optical-carrier-frequency clocks and optical frequency synthesis, and next-generation high-performance chip-scale clocks.
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
PTTI PRE-CONFERENCE TUTORIALS MONDAY, JANUARY 28
Pre-conference tutorials have been organized to provide in-depth learning prior to the start of the technical program. All courses will be taught in a classroom setting. Electronic notes will be made available for download by registered attendees from the meeting website; registered attendees are encouraged to download notes in advance of courses. Power will NOT be available to course attendees for individual laptop computers; please come prepared with adequate battery power if required. ION reserves the right to cancel a portion of the tutorial program based on availability of the instructor.
Time Course Presenter
9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. The Application of Frequency Stability Analysis and the Use of Time Domain Statistics for Clock and Oscillator Performance Assessment
Gregory L. Weaver
10:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Atomic Clock Technology Dr. R. Lutwak, Dr. D.R. Scherer12:15 p.m.–1:30 p.m. Lunch on Your Own
1:30 p.m. - 2:45 p.m. Timescales and Timekeeping Dr. Patrizia Tavella
3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Overview with a Focus on Precise Time Disseminations and Standards
Ed Powers
4:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Distributing Time and Frequency Data: Requirements and Methods Dr. Judah Levine
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
PTTI PRE-CONFERENCE TUTORIALS ROOM: REGENCY B
Dr. Robert Lutwak serves as Senior Technologist for Position, Navigation, and Timing (ST PNT) at the Air Force Research Laboratory in Dayton, OH (AFRL). He received his B.S. in Physics from Miami University in 1988 and his Ph.D. in Atomic and Optical Physics from M.I.T. in 1997.
Dr. David R. Scherer is a Lead Scientist at The MITRE Corporation in the Communications, SIGINT, and PNT Department. Previously, he was a Senior Physicist at Microsemi, where he developed several next-generation atomic clock architectures. He holds a Ph.D. in Optical Sciences from the University of Arizona.
Timescales and TimekeepingRealizing a time scale means having at one’s disposal atomic clocks, a measurement system, and the capacity to process data to establish an ensemble time possibly steered on the international reference time UTC. The definition of a reference time scale and the necessary tools, mostly related to the necessary algorithms, will be reviewed and the current realization of UTC at the BIPM will be presented. Time scales and timekeeping are as well of interest for navigation systems: clocks are to be estimated, predicted, and validated as typically carried out in timekeeping laboratories. The tutorial will cover these aspects, also showing the main challenges in this area.
Dr. Patrizia Tavella holds a degree in Physics and a Ph.D. in Metrology. She is Director of the Time Department at the BIPM and was previously a senior scientist with the Italian Metrology Institute, INRIM, Torino, Italy. Her main interests are mathematical and statistical models mostly applied to atomic time scale algorithms.
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Overview with a Focus on Precise Time Disseminations and StandardsGPS has provided an operational Position Navigation and Timing (PNT) service for more 25 years, and the vast majority of PNT applications use GPS as its fundamental source for PNT data. GPS operates using very precise synchronized ranging signals, where in general every nanosecond of synchronization error can lead to one foot of navigation error. Because of this exquisite timing synchronization, GPS provides a precise timing service used to support many important user communities ranging from power grid, telecommunication networks, science and the banking industry. Today GPS is no longer the only GNSS system, there are now several other GNSS systems in either operations and/or system development. This tutorial will provide an overview of how GPS operates, discuss the other GNSS systems and the reference standard that underlay each system.
Ed Powers received his BS and MS degrees in Electronic Engineering and Instrumental Science from the University of Arkansas. Previously, he has worked at NRL on GPS clock development and at the USNO as the GPS Operations Division Chief. Ed joined the Aerospace Corp in October 2018 as Senior Project Engineer, GNSS Engineering & Technology.
Distributing Time and Frequency Data: Requirements and MethodsThis course will describe the methods that are used to distribute time and frequency information, with special emphasis on methods that are independent of global navigation satellite systems. The course will illustrate these methods with the requirements of commercial and financial institutions and distributors of electrical power. In addition to the purely technical requirements, additional requirements that result from the need to demonstrate traceability to national standards will also be discussed. The level of accuracy that is required to support these applications is relatively modest from the perspective of the internal time scales of most National Metrology Institutes and timing laboratories, but satisfying the requirements becomes much more challenging when the need for extreme reliability and the limitations of many of the common distribution channels are included. None of the alternative solutions that have been proposed is completely adequate now and all of them will have increasing difficulty satisfying the increasing accuracy requirements in the future.
Dr. Judah Levine is a Fellow of NIST and leader of the Network Synchronization Project in the Time and Frequency Division in Boulder, Colorado. He received his Ph.D. in Physics from New York University in 1966. Dr. Levine is a member of the IEEE and a Fellow of the American Physical Society.
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
PTTI PRE-CONFERENCE TUTORIALS ROOM: REGENCY B
ITM/PTTI 2019 THANKS OUR CONFERENCE PARTNERS
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
TECHNICAL SESSIONS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 29
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
PTTI Tutorials ChairDr. Jennifer TaylorUS Naval Observatory
January 29, 201910:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.Grand Ballroom E/F/G
MEETING ORGANIZERS
PLENARY SESSION
ITM General ChairDr. Jiyun Lee KAIST, South Korea
ITM Program ChairDr. Olivier Julien u-blox, Switzerland
PTTI General ChairDr. James HanssenUS Naval Observatory
PTTI Program ChairDr. Michael ColemanNaval Research Laboratory
GNSS Resilience: From Single Point of Failure to Many Points of SuccessDana Goward Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation
Officials at the US Department of Homeland Security have called the nation’s over-reliance on GNSS "…a single point of failure for critical infrastructure." This presentation will examine studies and real world instances of GNSS disruption that demonstrate this challenge. A policy and technology roadmap to Protect signals, Toughen receivers, and Augment signals will be presented as a frame work for ensuring national PNT resilience.
The Development of Coordinated Universal TimeDr. Dennis D. McCarthy US Naval Observatory, Contractor/ International Astronomical Union In the nineteenth century the words "universal time" referred only to the concept of a time scale that might be the same all over the world, as opposed to the numerous "local time" scales. In the eighteenth century Greenwich Mean Time was one of a small number of time scales to be used in conjunction with national almanacs for navigational purposes, but in 1884, following a number of international meetings, the International Meridian Conference proposed the Greenwich meridian as the origin of longitudes and further proposed the adoption of a "universal day" as the basis for timekeeping. This led to the use of the names Greenwich Mean Time, Greenwich Civil Time and Greenwich Mean Astronomical Time. In 1928 the International Astronomical Union first recommended using the name "Universal Time" to refer to the mean solar time on the Greenwich meridian. By 1956 astronomers recognized three varieties of Universal Time based on observations of stars, and by 1960 the term "Coordinated Universal Time" was being used informally to refer to the practice of timekeeping laboratories to "coordinate" their adjustments to clocks based on astronomical observations. The name was formalized by the Consultative Committee on Radio Communications (CCIR) in 1963, and in 1967 the CCIR and the IAU officially adopted the names Coordinated Universal Time and Temps Universel Coordonné (UTC). During all that time the science of timekeeping improved by orders of magnitude proceeding from a time scale based solely on stellar observations to one based on the frequency of an atomic transition in the Caesium atom. The development of UTC continues today with existing speculation regarding its definition, practical realization and applications.
Dr. Michael Coleman PTTI Program ChairNaval Research Laboratory
Dr. Olivier JulienITM Program Chairu-blox, Switzerland
Dr. John RaquetION President Air Force Institute of Technology
ITM/PTTI PLENARY KEYNOTES
WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS
WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS
10:00 a.m. - 10:10 a.m.
KEYNOTEPRESENTATIONS
10:10 a.m. - 11:45 a.m.
EXHIBITORPRESENTATIONS
11:45 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
LUNCH IN THE EXHIBIT HALL12:30 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.
Session B1b: GNSS Interference and Jamming Detection, Characterization and Mitigation Room: Regency B3:55 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
4:00 Exploiting Wideband Characteristics of GNSS Interference Geo-localization: Theory and Field Test: Joon Wayn Cheong, Andrew G. Dempster, University of New South Wales, Australia; Ryan J. Thompson, Joe Fleming, and Graeme Hooper, GPSat Systems Pty Ltd., Australia
4:23 GNSS Interference in L-Band SAR Missions – Assessment and Mitigation: Oliver Montenbruck, Markus Markgraf, DLR/GSOC, Germany; Michel Tossaint, ESA/ESTEC, The Netherlands
4:46 A Comparison of Optimized Mitigation Techniques for Swept-frequency Jammers: Wenjian Qin, Politecnico di Torino, Italy; Micaela Troglia Gamba, Emanuela Falletti, Istituto Superiore Mario Boella, Italy; Fabio Dovis, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
5:08 IMM Methods for Carrier Phase Tracking and Navigation Data Bits Estimation Through Interference: Wengxiang Zhao and Boris Pervan, Illinois Institute of Technology
Alternates
1. Interference Detection based on Fractional Order Time-Frequency Analysis for GNSS Receivers: Kewen Sun, Hefei University of Technology, China
TECHNICAL SESSIONS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 29
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Session A1: GNSS Augmentation Systems and their Evolution Room: Grand Ballroom EFG1:45 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
1:50 Development and Evaluation of Airborne Multipath Error Bounds for L1-L5: Juan Blanch, Todd Walter, R. Eric Phelts, Stanford University
2:12 Towards Airborne Multipath Models for dual Constellation and Dual-frequency GNSS: M. Felux, M.-S. Circiu, S. Caizzone, C. Enneking, F. Fohlmeister, M. Rippl, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
2:35 Galileo Model of Group Delay Accuracy for Advanced RAIM users: Ilaria Martini, European Commission, Belgium; Matteo Sgammini, JRC, European Commission, Belgium; Juan Pablo Boyero, European Commission, Belgium
2:58 Sample Temporal Correlation Effect on Integrity Risk: Eugene Bang, Carl Milner and Christophe Macabiau, Ecole Nationale de l'Aviation Civile, France; Philippe Estival, DSNA, France
3:25 - 3:55, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
4:00 Integrity Risk Evaluation of Impact of Ionospheric Anomalies on GAST D GBAS: Moonseok Yoon and Jiyun Lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea; Sam Pullen, Stanford University
4:23 Safety Analysis of Ranging Biases on the WAAS GEOs: Todd Walter, Juan Blanch, Stanford University and Eric Altshuler, Sequoia Research Corporation
4:46 Comparison of two Ionospheric Delay Correction Methods in SBAS of China: Shan Wang, China University of Mining & Technology, China; Xin Meng, Zun Niu, Peking University, China; Yu Yin, Beihang University, China
5:08 An Evaluation of WAAS to Meet Maritime Navigation Requirements in Canadian Waters: Gregory Johnson, Christopher Grayson, and Gaurav Dhungana, Alion Science and Technology; Jean Delisle, Valcom Consulting Group
Alternates
1. Field Data Collection to Validate the Usage of WAAS for Maritime Navigation in Canadian Waters: Gregory Johnson, Christopher Grayson, and Gaurav Dhungana, Alion Science and Technology; Jean Delisle, Valcom Consulting Group
2. Performance Evaluation of L5 SBAS Message from Quasi – Zenith Satellite System: Nian-Jhen Wu and Shau-Shiun Jan, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan; Takeyasu Sakai, ENRI, Japan
Dr. Denis Bouvet, Thales Avionics, France
Dr. Sam Pullen, Stanford University
Session B1a: Advanced GNSS Signal Processing for Challenging Environments Room: Regency B1:45 p.m. – 3:25 p.m.
1:50 A GPS and GLONASS L1 Vector Tracking Software-Defined Receiver: Tanner Watts, Scott Martin, and David Bevly, Auburn University
2:12 Characterization of Line-of-sight and Non-line-of-sight Pseudo-range Multipath Errors from GNSS Mass-market Receiver in Urban Environment: Eustachio Roberto Matera, Axel Garcia-Pena, Olivier Julien, Carl Milner, Bertrand Ekambi, Abbia GNSS Technologies, France
2:35 A High-Fidelity Wideband Signal Software Simulator for GNSS Antenna Arrays Accelerated by GPU: Guifeng Fan, XiaoWei Cui, Tsinghua University, China; Xueyong Xu, North Information Control Research Academy Group Co., Ltd., China
2:58 GNSS Signal Acquisition based on Double-block Partial Coherent Combining for Overcoming bit Transitions: Jing Wang, Wei Wang, Aimeng Liu, Zhenyu Wei, Harbin Engineering University, China
3:25 - 3:55, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
Alternate
1. A Theoretical Analysis of the Array Induced bias Considering Carrier Phase Continuity: Zhao Lin, Liu Aimeng, Ding Jicheng, Wang Jing, College of Automation, Harbin Engineering University, China
Dr. Sai Kalyanaraman, Rockwell Collins
Elias Gkougkas, Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany
Dr. Okuary Osechas, German Aerospace Center (DLR) Germany
Dr. Laura Ruotsalainen, National Land Survey of Finland, Finland
ITMOne Registration Fee, Two Technical Events and a Commercial Exhibitwww.ion.org
®
INSTITUTE OF NAVIGATION
PTTIINTERNATIONAL TECHNICAL MEETING
PRECISE TIME AND TIME INTERVAL SYSTEMS AND APPLICATIONS MEETING
January 21–24, 2020Hyatt Regency Mission Bay
San Diego, CA Save the Date!
PTTI TECHNICAL SESSIONS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 29
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
1:50 The BIPM Time Department: Report on Activity: Patrizia Tavella, Gérard Petti, Gianna Panfilo, Frédéric Meyenadier, Aurélie Harmegnies, Johanna Goncalves, Laurent Tisserand, Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, France
2:12 Status of the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Precision Clock Evaluation Facility: Ken Senior, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
2:35 NPL’s Time and Frequency Laboratory Activities: Elizabeth Laier English, National Physical Laboratory, UK
2:58 NRC Frequency and Time Group Laboratory Report: Marina Gertsvolf, National Research Council Canada, Canada
3:25 - 3:55, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
Alternates1. Time Keeping and Time Transfer Activities at NIM:
Aimin Zhang, Kun Liang, Yuan Gao, Zhiqiang Yang, Yuzhuo Wang, Qinghua Xu, National Institute of Metrology, China
2. Improvements of TA(SU) and UTC(SU) during Last Year: I. Blinov, A. Boyko, N. Kosheliaevskii and O. Sokolova, VNIIFTRI Department of Metrology for Time and Space Mendeleevo, Russia
Session P1c: PTTI Poster Session Room: Grand Ballroom FoyerTuesday, January 29, 20195:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.
1. Development of a New Modem for TWCP: Miho Fujieda, Tadahiro Gotoh, Ryo Tabuchi, and Ryuichi Ichikawa, NICT
2. The H2020 Project CLONETS: Clock Services over Optical-fibre Networks in Europe – Approaching the Project Finish: J. Vojtech, J. Radil, V. Smotlacha, Radek Velc, CESNET z.s.p.o., Czech Republic; P. Krehlik, L. Sliwczynski, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland; M. Campanella, Consortium GARR, Italy; D. Calonico, C. Clivati, F. Levi, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Italy; O. Cíp, S. Rerucha, Institute of Scientific Instruments of the ASCR, v.v.i. (ISI), Czech Republic; R. Holzwarth, M. Lessing, S. Saint-Jalm, Menlo Systems, Germany; F. Camargo, B. Desruelle, J. Lautier-Gaud, Muquans, France; E. Laier English, J. Kronjäger, P. Whibberley, National Physical Laboratory, UK; E. Bookjans, P-E. Pottie, P. Tuckey, LNE-SYRTE, Observatoire de Paris, PSL Research University, CNRS, Sorbonne Universite, France; T. Müller, J. Štefl, M. Šteflová, OPTOKON, a.s., Czech Republic; P. Nogas, R. Urbaniak, Piktime Systems sp. z o.o., Poland; A. Binczewski, W. Bogacki, K. Turza, Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center, Poland; G. Grosche, H. Schnatz, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany; E. Camisard, N. Quintin, GIP-Renater, France; J. Diaz, E. Ros, T. García, Seven Solutions S.L., Spain; A. Galardini, Conzorzio ToP-IX, Italy; A. Seeds, Z. Yang, University College London, UK; A. Amy-Klein, LPL, Université Paris 13, CNRS, France
3. Asymmetry Effects of Satellite Motion on Two-way Time and Frequency Transfer: Wen-Hung Tseng, Shinn-Yan Lin, Chunghwa Telecom Co., Ltd., Taiwan
4. Research Progress of Time Scale and UTC(NTSC) Steering: Shuhong Zhao, Shaowu Dong, Lili Qu, Shanshan Bai, Dongshan Yin, National Time Service Center, China
5. Bilateral Phase Noise Comparison between Tubitak UME and SASO NMCC: Adem Gedik, Ramiz Hamid, Khalid S. AlDawood, Fahad A. AlMuhlaki, Waleed M. Al Harbi, TUBITAK UME, Turkey
6. The Long-term Stability of the U.S. Naval Observatory’s Hydrogen Masers: Demetrios Matsakis, U.S. Naval Observatory
7. To the Issue of Frequency Band and Frequency Measurement Accuracy : I. Blinov, Yu Domnin, and N. Kosheliaevskii, VNIIFTRI Department of Metrology for Time and Space Mendeleevo, Russia
8. Time and Frequency Activities at the JHU Applied Physics Laboratory: Mihran Miranian, Jeffrey F. Garstecki, Olukayode K. Okusaga, Richard A. Dragonette, Gregory L. Weaver, Johns Hopkins University/APL
Dr. Demetrios Matsakis, U.S. Naval Observatory
Dr. James Hanssen, U.S. Naval Observatory
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Victor Zhang, National Institute of Standards and Technology
4:00 An Improved and Robust Cs Fountain Clock Design – Novel Evaluation Tools and Operational Configuration: K. Szymaniec, R.J. Hendricks, K. Burrows, National Physical Laboratory, UK
4:23 Evaluation of the Microwave Leakage Induced Frequency Shift of the NRC-FCs2 Atomic Fountain Clock: Bin Jian, Scott Beattie, A. John Alcock, Marina Gertsvolf, National Research Council, Canada
4:46 Frequency Comparisons via GPS Carrier-phase: Jump Processing, Temperature Compensation and Zero/Short-baseline Noise-floors: Daphna G. Enzer, David W. Murphy, and William A. Diener, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
5:08 Suppression of Dick Effect by Interleaving Lock in a Ramsey-CPT Atomic Clock : Pengfei Cheng, Jianwei Zhang, Tsinghua University, China; Daonong Zhang, North China Power Engineering CO. LTD, China; Lijun Wang, Tsinghua University, China
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Session P2: GNSS Time and Frequency Transfer Room: Regency A8:30 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
8:35 Biases Introduced by Multi-path Effects on Time Transfer with GNSS Receivers: Daniele Rovera, Michel Abgrall, Franziska Riedel, Pierre Uhrich, LNE-SYRTE, Observatoire de Paris, Universite PSL, CNRS, Sorbonne Universite, France; Pascale Defraigne, Bruno Bertrand, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Belgium; Jean-Marie Torre, University Nice Sophia Antipolis, CNRS, IRD, Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur, France
8:57 Inter-satellite biases in GNSS Pseudoranges and its Impact on Time Transfer: P. Defraigne, K. Verhasselt, N. Bergeot, J.-M. Chevalier, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Belgium
9:20 Thinking on GNSS System Time Scale and Interoperability: N. Kosheliaevskii, VNIIFTRI Department of Metrology for Time and Space Mendeleevo, Russia
9:43 GNSS-to-GNSS Time Offsets: A Realistic Case Study: G. Signorile, I. Sesia, T.T. Thai, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Italy; P. Defraigne, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Belgium; P. Tavella, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica & Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, Italy
10:05-10:35, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
10:40 Amelioration of the usage and Monitoring of GNSS Signals at PTB: Andreas Bauch, Thomas Polewka, Dirk Piester, and Egle Staliuniene, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany
11:03 Time Transfer via BDS and Galileo Compared to Time Transfer via GPS: K. Liang, A. Zhang, Z. Yang, Division of Time and Frequency Metrology, National Institute of Metrology, China; Q. Chen, K. Han, Division of Time and Frequency Metrology, National Institute of Metrology & Beijing JiaoTong University, China; C. Ding, Division of Time and Frequency Metrology, National Institute of Metrology, China & Qingdao Institute of Measurement Technology, China
11:26 Time Scales Comparisons Using Multi-Frequency Combinations of BeiDou Signals: Petr Pánek, Alexander Kuna, Institute of Photonics and Electronics, Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic
11:48 Precise Time in your Pocket: Timing Performance of Android Phones: Ciro Gioia, Sophie Damy, Daniele Borio, European Commission Joint Research Centre Directorate E - Space, Security and Migration Unit for Technology Innovation in Security, Italy
8:35 Investigation of the Vulnerability of Mobile Networks Against Spoofing Attacks on their GNSS Timing-receiver: Ronny Blum, Dominik Dötterböck, Thomas Pany, Universität der Bundeswehr Munich, Germany
8:57 The Effects of the Distance-decreasing Attacks on Cryptography-based GNSS Signals: Kewei Zhang and Panos Papadimitratos, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
9:20 A Novel Interference Detection based on Wigner-Hough Transform for GNSS Receivers: Kewen Sun, Hefei University of Technology, China
9:43 Tests of Crowdsourced Smartphones Measurements to Detect GNSS Spoofing and Other Disruptions: Sherman Lo, Stanford University; Dennis Akos, Stanford University and University of Colorado Boulder; Brandon Cotts, Damien Miralles, University of Colorado Boulder
10:05-10:35, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
10:40 Increasing International Civil Aviation Resilience: A Proposal for Nomenclature, Categorization and Treatment of New Interference Threats: Ignacio Fernández-Hernández, European Commission, Belgium; Todd Walter, Stanford University; Ken Alexander, Barbara Clark, Federal Aviation Administration; Eric Châtre, European Commission, Belgium; Chris Hegarty, The MITRE Corporation
11:03 On Cyber-security of Augmentation Networks: Alessandro Neri, Sara Baldoni, ROMA TRE University, Italy; Roberto Capua, SOGEI, Italy
11:26 A Novel Authentication Signal Component for Codeless Correlation: E. Gkougkas, M. Arizabaleta, T. Pany and B. Eissfeller, Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany
11:48 A Feasibility Study and Risk Assessment of Security Code Estimation and Replay Attacks: M. Arizabaleta, E. Gkougkas, T. Pany and B. Eissfeller, Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany
8:35 A Novel Indoor Localization Method Based On Image Retrieval and Dead Reckoning: Huiping Zhu, Jiuchao Qian, Rendong Ying, Xiaoguang Zhu, Ruihang Miao, Fei Wen, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China; Jun Shen, Beijing Unistrong Science and Technology Co. Ltd., China; Peilin Liu, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China
8:57 FQS: Feature Quality Supervision for Visual-Inertial Navigation: Hongyan Liu, Huimin Ma, Jinghuan Wen, Jingxuan Su, Zheng Yao, Lin Zhang, Tsinghua University, China
9:20 Fusion of Dual Optical Image Solutions for Augmentation of GNSS-based Aircraft Landing Systems: M. Angermann, S. Wolkow, A. Dekiert, P. Hecker, Institute of Flight Guidance, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany
9:43 Diagnostics of GNSS-based Virtual Balise in Railway Using Embedded Odometry and Track Geometry: Heekwon No, Jeremy Vezinet, and Carl Milner, Ecole Nationale de l’Aviation Civile, France
10:05-10:35, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
10:40 Performance Evaluation of Navigation Using LEO Satellite Signals with Periodically Transmitted Satellite Positions: Christian Ardito, Joshua Morales, Joe Khalife, and Zak (Zaher) M. Kassas, University of California, Irvine
11:03 Ultrasonic Wheel Based Aiding for Land Vehicle Navigation in GNSS Denied Environment: Mohamed Moussa, Adel Moussa, and Naser El-Sheimy, University of Calgary, Canada
11:26 UWB-based Infrastructure-free Cooperative Navigation with NLoS Ranging bias Compensation for Indoor Pedestrian Geolocation: Jianan Zhu and Solmaz S. Kia, University of California Irvine
11:48 A Grid SINS/USBL Tightly-Coupled Integration Algorithm for Unmanned Underwater Vehicles in Polar Regions: Zhao Lin, Kang Yingyao, and Cheng Jianhua, Harbin Engineering University, China
Alternate
1. GNSS/INS Integration with Partial-ZUPT for Land Vehicle Navigation: Jingxuan Su, Zheng Yao, Mingquan Lu, Tsinghua University, China
TECHNICAL SESSIONS WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 30
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Dr. Dennis Akos, University of Colorado at Boulder
Dr. Beatrice Motella, Institute Superiore Mario Boella, Italy
Dr. Rui Sun, Nanjing University of Aeronautics & Astronautics, China
Dr. Andrey Soloviev, QuNav
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Dr. Pascale Defraigne, Observatoire Royal de Belgique, Belgium
Dr. Giancarlo Cerretto, Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica, Italy
12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. • Lunch in Exhibit Hall • Grand Ballroom A-D
TECHNICAL SESSIONS WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 30
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
TECHNICAL SESSIONS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 30
12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. • Lunch in Exhibit Hall • Grand Ballroom A-D
Session P3a: PTTI Applications in Space Room: Regency A1:45 p.m. – 3:25 p.m.
1:50 High Stability Reference Clock for Small Satellites: Damon Van Buren, University of Colorado Boulder, Space Signal Sciences LLC; Scott Palo, Penina Axelrad, University of Colorado Boulder
2:12 Ensemble Synchronization for a Constellation of Geosynchronous Communication Satellites: James Camparo and Travis Driskell, The Aerospace Corporation
2:35 GNSS Stability Monitoring using the Three-Cornered Hat Method: Ciro Gioia, Daniele Borio and Sophie Damy, European Commission Joint Research Centre Directorate Space, Security and Migration Unit Technology Innovation in Security, Italy
2:58 PulChron: A Pulsar Time Scale Demonstration for Galileo: Ricardo Píriz, Esteban Garbin, Pedro Roldán, GMV, Spain; Michael Keith, Benjamin Shaw, University of Manchester, UK; Setnam Shemar, Kathryn Burrows, John Davis, NPL, UK; Stefano Binda, ESA, The Netherlands
3:25 - 3:55, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
Session P3b: Space and Terrestrial Clocks Room: Regency A3:55 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
4:00 The Frequency Instability of a Limited Production Run of the cRb-Clock: F. G. Ascarrunz, Maria. C. Delgado Aramburo, L. I. Ascarrunz, and Lorenzo Hernandez, SpectraDynamics, Inc.; S. R. Jefferts and Alessandro Banducci, National Institute of Standards and Technology
4:23 Design Innovations for Miniaturized GPS Quality Clocks: Chad Fertig, Karl Nelson, Chad Hoyt, Justin Foley, Neal Solmeyer, Matthew Puckett, Jeff Kriz, Joshua Dorr, Martin Lin, Rob Compton, Jim Nohava, Matt Spurr, Terry Fabian, Terry Stark, Honeywell Aerospace
4:46 The Optical Rubidium Atomic Frequency Standard: Toward a Rugged, Space-worthy Optical Atomic Clock: Benjamin Stuhl, Michael Wojcik, Michael Holt, Jason Wooden, Jordan Armstrong, Space Dynamics Laboratory; Kyle W. Martin, Matthew S. Bigelow, ATA; Nathan D. Lemke, Bethel University
5:08 The Evolution of the Space CSAC: From Concept to Qualified Product: Stewart Hampton, Matt Stanczyk, Peter Cash and Mike Silveira, Microsemi Frequency and Time Corporation
1:50 Integrity for High Accuracy GNSS Correction Services: Landon Urquhart and Rodrigo Leandro Sapcorda Services Inc.
2:12 A New Cycle-Slip Detection Algorithm for Network RTK Using Optimal Dual-Frequency Carrier-Phase Combinations: Donguk Kim, Seoul National University, Republic of Korea; Junesol Song, ENAC, France; Sunkyoung Yu, Changdon Kee, Seoul National University, Republic of Korea
2:35 Analysis of GPS-DCM Clock Corrections in Support of 1Hz PPP-AR Applications: Omid Kamali and François Lahaye, Natural Resources Canada, Canada
2:58 Emulating the Smartphone GNSS Receiver to Understand and Analyze the Anomalies in RTK Positioning using GNSS Raw Measurements: Himanshu Sharma, Andreas Schütz, and Thomas Pany, Universität der Bundeswehr münchen (ISTA), Germany
3:25 - 3:55, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
Alternates1. Deployment and Evaluation of a Real-time
Kinematic System Using Tinc-VPN Software: Xing Liu, Tarig Ballal, Martins Bruvelis, and Tareq Y. Al-Naffouri, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia
2. Utilizing a Priori Attitude Baseline Information to Improve the Reliability of Integer Ambiguity Resolution of Low-Cost Receivers for Relative Positioning Between Autonomous Vehicles: Troupe Tabb, Scott Martin, David Bevly, Auburn University
Session B3b: Innovative Navigation Algorithms Room: Regency B3:55 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.4:00 Performance of Dual-Channel Codeless and
Semicodeless Processing: John Betz and Alex Cerruti, The MITRE Corporation
4:23 Robust Navigation under Incomplete Localization Using Reinforcement Learning: Xiao Chu, Rendong Ying, Wuyang Xue, Ruihang Miao, Jiuchao Qian, Fei Wen, Jun Shen and Peilin Liu, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Beijing Unistrong Science and Technology Co. Ltd, China
4:46 On-the-fly Ambiguity Resolution without Requirements of Priori Position Information for Passive Pseudolite Receiver: Shijie Yun, Zheng Yao, Tengfei Wang, Jingxuan Su, Mingquan Lu, Tsinghua University, China
5:08 Collaborative Monitoring for Alternative PNT Services: Okuary Osechas and Michael Meurer, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
Alternate
1. Kalman Filtering for Compressed Sensing of GNSS Signals: Juan Carlos Bermúdez Ordoñez and Fernando Gómez Comendador, Technical University of Madrid, Spain
Session A3: Non-GNSS Navigation Methods for Autonomous Systems Room: Grand Ballroom EFG1:45 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
1:50 A Machine Learning Approach for Wi-Fi RTT Ranging: Nir Dvorecki, Ofer Bar-Shalom, Leor Banin, and Yuval Amizur, Intel Corporation, Israel
2:12 Single Transmitter based Precise Positioning System using Multiple Antenna: Experimental Tests: O-J. Kim, B. Shin, C. Kee, Seoul National University, Republic of Korea; C. Kim, Kakao Mobility Corp., Republic of Korea; T. Lee, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, Republic of Korea; H. So, G, Kim, Agency for Defense Development, Republic of Korea
2:35 An Experimental Receiver for Positioning by Triangulating on Non-Cooperating Cell Towers: Gennady Y. Poberezhskiy, David E. Lewis, Paul H. Grobert, Paul G. Quinn, William K. Wallace; Raytheon Space and Airborne Systems
2:58 Aerial Simultaneous Localization and Mapping by the Earth's Magnetic Anomaly Field: Taylor Lee and Aaron Canciani, Air Force Institute of Technology
3:25 - 3:55, Break. Refreshments in Exhibit Hall
4:00 Comparison of Transfer Alignment Methods for Fixed-Wing Air Vehicles with Actual F-16 Flight Data: Mehmet Erçin Özgeneci, Evrim Özten, Roketsan, Turkey
4:23 Magnetic Gradient Tensor Framework for Attitude-Free Position Estimation: Timothy Getscher and Paul Frontera, US Naval Academy
4:46 DME Multipath Simulations as a Critical enabler to Support DME/DME RNP Reversion: Victor Gordo, Gema Paz, Javier San Juan, Ineco, Spain
5:08 Rethinking Star Selection in Celestial Navigation: Peter F Swaszek, University of Rhode Island; Richard J. Hartnett and Kelly C. Seals, U.S. Coast Guard Academy
Alternates
1. Surface Correlation based Localization Technology using only LTE Signals in Urban Canyon: Jung Ho Lee, Beomju Shin, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea; Seo Ho Lee, Lee Technology Korea Co., Ltd., South Korea; Jinwoo Park, Korea University, South Korea; Taikjin Lee, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea
2. Study of HD Radio™ Digital FM Broadcast Signals for Possible Navigation Use: Brian D. Slosman, Jeffrey H. Reed, Mark L. Psiaki, Virginia Polytech, Institute and State University
Dr. Sébastien Carcanague, Swift Navigation
Dr. Sandra Verhagen, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
Dr. Maarten Uijt de Haag, Ohio University
Dr. Liang Chen, Wuhan University, China
Dr. James Camparo, The Aerospace Corporation
James Hagerman, Lockheed Martin Space
Dr. Nicola Linty, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
Dr. Terry Moore, University of Nottingham, UK
Peter Cash, Microsemi
Dr. Thomas McClelland, Frequency Electronics, Inc.
Session P4a: Ground Based Time and Frequency Transfer Room: Regency A8:30 a.m. – 10:05 a.m.
8:35 Frequency Comb Optical Two-Way Time-Frequency Transfer: Laura C. Sinclair, Jean-Daniel Deschênes, Hugo Bergeron, William C. Swann, Isaac Khader, Esther Baumann, Martha Bodine, Kevin C. Cossel, and Nathan R. Newbury, NIST
8:57 European Union Funded Projects for Time and Frequency Transfer in Optical Fiber: Vladimir Smotlacha, CESNET, Czech Republic
9:20 Nine Years of Operation of Time Transfer by Laser Link (T2L2): Daniele Rovera, LNE-SYRTE, Observatoire de Paris, Universite PSL, CNRS, Sorbonne Universite, France; Etienne Samain, Jean-Marie Torre, Clement Courde, Alexandre Belli, Pierre Exertier, University Nice Sophia Antipolis, CNRS, IRD, Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur, France; Pierre Uhrich, Michel Abgrall, LNE-SYRTE, Observatoire de Paris, Universite PSL, CNRS, Sorbonne Universite, France, Philippe Guillemot, CNES, France
9:43 NRC TimeLinkTM – From Traceable Time Source to Traceable Remote Calibration: Andre Charbonneau, Bill Hoger, Deval Patel, Hai Pham, John Bernard and Marina Gertsvolf, National Research Council Canada, Canada
10:05-10:35, Break. Refreshments served in foyer
Session P4b: Alternative Techniques in Time Dissemination Room: Regency A10:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
10:40 A Century of WWV: 100th Anniversary Commemoration: Glenn Nelson, Time and Frequency Division (Radio Stations WWV/WWVB), NIST
11:03 Towards the Quantification of Assured Time: Stefania Romisch, Alexander Radnaev, and Bijunath Patla, NIST
11:26 Huygens: A Scalable Software-based System for Nanosecond-level Accurate Clock Synchronization for Commodity Networks: Yilong Geng, Shiyu Liu, Zi Yin, Ashish Naik, Balaji Prabhakar, Mendel Rosenblum, Amin Vahdat, Stanford University
11:48 Frequency & Time Performance Review of a 500km cascaded WhiteRabbit Link: Namneet Kaur, Florian Frank, Philip Tuckey, Paul-Eric Pottie, Observatoire de Paris/CNRS, France
8:35 SBAS Corrections for PPP Integrity with Solution Separation: Kazuma Gunning, Juan Blanch and Todd Walter, Stanford University
8:57 Reducing Computational Load in Solution Separation for Kalman Filters and an Application to PPP Integrity: Juan Blanch, Kaz Gunning, Todd Walter, Stanford University; Lance De Groot, Laura Norman. NovAtel, Inc., Canada
9:20 Reliability and Integrity Measures of GPS Positioning via Geometrical Constraints: Hani Dbouk and Steffen Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany
9:43 Demonstration of Integrity Protection for Multi-Constellation Carrier Phase Solution using RANSAC-based FDE: Zhen Zhu, East Carolina University; Eric Vinande, AFRL
10:05-10:35, Break. Refreshments served in foyer
10:40 Dual-Constellation Aided High Integrity and High Accuracy Navigation Filter for Maritime Applications: Shuchen Liu, Jan-Jöran Gehrt, Dirk Abel, and René Zweigel, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
11:03 Ground Monitor Threshold Models of BDS GBAS: Zhipeng Wang, Yu Yin, Qiang Li, Dan Song, Yue Zhang, Beihang University, China
11:26 An Augmentation and Integrity Monitoring Network for Railway and Automotive Transportation: P. Salvatori, C. Stallo, A. Coluccia, RadioLabs, Italy; S. Pullen, S. Lo, Stanford University, A. Neri, Università degli Studi Roma TRE, Roma, Italy
11:48 Implementation and Evaluation of GPS/GLONASS RAIM: Natasha Norris, Frank van Graas, Ohio University, Eric Vinande, Air Force Research Laboratory
Alternates
1. Fault Exclusion Using Single Kalman Filter: Cagatay Tanil, Samer Khanafseh, Illinois Institute of Technology; Mathieu Joerger, University of Arizona; Boris Pervan, Illinois Institute of Technology
2. Questions for Providers of Expert Opinion on Logged GNSS Evidence: Andrew Dempster, University of New South Wales, Australia; Allison Kealy, RMIT University, Australia; Gary Edmond, University of New South Wales, Australia
Session A4: GNSS Remote Sensing, Atmo-spheric Science and Space Applications Room: Grand Ballroom EFG8:30 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
8:35 Assessment of Ionospheric Spatial Decorrelation for Daytime Operations of GBAS in the Brazilian Region: Hyeyeon Chang, Moonseok Yoon, and Jiyun Lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, South Korea; Sam Pullen, Stanford University; Leonardo Marini Pereira, Institute of Aerospace Control (ICEA), Brazil
8:57 A Comparative Analysis of Polar and Equatorial Scintillation Effects on GPS L1 and L5 Tracking Loops: Caner Savas, Politecnico di Torino, Italy; Gianluca Falco, Istituto Superiore Mario Boella, Italy; Fabio Dovis, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
9:20 Evaluation of Low Latitude Scintillation Data with a Dual Kalman Smoother: Friederike Fohlmeister, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany; Felix Antreich, Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica, ITA, Brazil; Volker Wilken, Martin Kriegel, DLR, Germany; João Cesar Moura Mota, André Lima Ferrer de Almeida, Federal University of Ceará (UFC), Brazil; Francisco Geraldo de Melo Pinheiro, State University of Ceará, Brazil; Josef A. Nossek, UFC, Brazil
9:43 Half-year Comparison of Precipitable Water Vapor Retrieved with Novel Ground-based Microwave Radiometer and GPS Receiver at Tsukuba and Numerical Weather Analysis Data: Ryuichi Ichikawa, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan; Taketo Nagasaki, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization, Japan; Osamu Tajima, Kyoto University, Japan; Hiroshi Takiguchi, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Japan; Kentaro Araki, Takuya Tajiri, Meteorological Research Institute, Japan
10:05-10:35, Break. Refreshments served in foyer
10:40 Monitoring Sea Level Change in Arctic using GNSS-Reflectometry: Su-Kyung Kim and Jihye Park, Oregon State University
11:03 GPS and InSAR Inversion for Coseismic Deformation Field and Slip Distribution of the Ms7.0 Jiuzhaigou Earthquake: Huixia Li, Key Lab of Poyang Lake Environment & Resource Utilization, Nanchang University, University of New Brunswick, Canada; Wenhao Wu, Hunan University of Science And Technology, China; Hang Guo, Nanchang University, China; Richard B. Langley, University of New Brunswick, Canada
11:26 Flight Results of GPS-Based Attitude Determination for the Canadian CASSIOPE Satellite: A. Hauschild, O. Montenbruck, German Aerospace Center (DLR) German Space Operations Center (GSOC), Germany; R.B. Langley, University of New Brunswick, Canada
11:48 A Star Tracker for Cubesats - Implementation and Analysis: Wen-Chiao Chen and Shau-Shiun Jan, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan
Alternate1. The eta-mi Distribution for L-band Ionospheric
Amplitude Scintillation Modeling and the Evaluation of GBAS CAT I Services under Low Latitude Regions: Vicente Carvalho Lima Filho, ITA/IAOP, Brazil; Leonardo Pereira Marini, ITA/ICEA, Brazil; Jonas Sousasantos, Lucas Alves Salles, ITA, Brazil; Eurico R. de Paula, INPE, Brazil; Alison O. Moraes, IAE, Brazil
TECHNICAL SESSIONS THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Dr. Carl Milner, ENAC, France
Dr. Ilaria Martini, European Commission (Advisor), Belgium
Dr. Adria Rovira-Garcia, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain
Dr. Joon Wayn, CheongUniversity of New South Wales, Australia
Shinn-Yan (Calvin) Lin, Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan
Dr. Daniele Rovera, Observatoire de Paris, France
12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. • Award Luncheon • Grand Ballroom D (Late arrivals will not be served after 12:30 p.m.)
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
Dr. Kenneth Senior, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
Dr. Marina Gertsvolf, National Research Council of Canada, Canada
TECHNICAL SESSIONS THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31
12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. • Award Luncheon • Grand Ballroom D (Late arrivals will not be served after 12:30 p.m.)
ITM/PTTI 2019 January 28 - 31, 2019 • Reston, Virginia www.ion.org
TECHNICAL SESSIONS THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 31Session P5a: Time Scales and Algorithms Room: Regency A2:00 p.m. – 3:35 p.m.
2:05 The History of the NBS/NIST Time Scale: Judah Levine, Time and Frequency Division NIST
2:27 The New TA(TL) Model Composited by Hydrogen Maser and Cesium Clock Ensembles: Shinn Yan Lin, Telecommunication Laboratories, Taiwan
2:49 Comparing Clock Steering Technique Performances in Simulations and Measurements: Tobias D. Schmidt, Christian Trainotti and Johann Furthner, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Communications and Navigation, Germany
3:11 The Behavior of Controlled Clocks: Demetrios Matsakis, US Naval Observatory
Alternates
1. Comparison of Clock Models in View of Clock Composition, Clock Steering and Measurement Fitting: Christian Trainotti, Tobias Schmidt, Johann Furthner, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Communications and Navigation, Germany
2. The Statistics of Computer Clocks and the Design of Synchronization Algorithms: Judah Levine, Time and Frequency Division, NIST
3:40 On Disciplined Oscillators for Traceable Frequency and Time in Metrology and Financial Sectors: Dirk Piester, Andreas Bauch, Thomas Polewka, Egle Staliuniene, Kristof Teichel, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany
4:02 UTC-Compliant Leap Seconds in Microsoft Windows: Dan Cuomo, Travis Luke, Sarath Madakasira, Microsoft
4:24 Accurate Local Timestamps: Brooks Harris, EdlMax, LLC
4:46 Re-Thinking Time Keeping for Modern IT Solutions: Son VoBa, Charles L. Ulland, Michael A. Lombardi, Arno Lentfer, Sync-n-Scale
2:05 BeiDou 3 Signal Quality Analysis and its Impact on Users: Steffen Thoelert, German Aerospace Center (DLR) & RWTH Aachen, Germany; Chris-toph Enneking, DLR, Germany; Felix Antreich, Instituto Tecnologico de Aeronautica, Brazil; Mi-chael Meurer, DLR & RWTH Aachen, Germany
2:27 Pure Pilot Signals: How Short can we Choose GNSS Spreading Codes?: Christoph Enneking, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany; Felix Antreich, Instituto Tecnologico de Aeronautica, Brazil; Manuel Appel, DLR, Germany; André L. F. de Almeida, Universi-dade Federal do Ceara, Brazil
2:49 Effect of GPS III Weighted Voting on P(Y) Receiver Processing Performance: David Wil-liam Allen, Alberto Arredondo, The Aerospace Corporation; Daniel R. Barnes, U.S. Air Force Global Positioning Systems Directorate; John W. Betz, Alessandro P Cerruti, The MITRE Cor-poration; Benjamin Davidson, Karl L. Kovach, Alexander Utter, The Aerospace Corporation
3:11 General Aviation Collision Avoidance System Based on BeiDou Short Message Service: Liu Ruihua, Xia Tianqi, and Wang Jian, Civil Aviation University of China
Session B5b: Next Generation Receiver and Antenna Technology Room: Regency B3:35 p.m. – 5:10 p.m.
3:40 A MBOC Signal Tracking Algorithm based on Split Processing Technique: Tengfei Da, Xiaowei Cui, Guifeng Fan, Tsinghua University, China; Xueyong Xu, North Information Control Research Academy Group Co., Ltd., China; Mingquan Lu, Tsinghua University, China
4:02 Single-Chip Delivers Multi-Band Multi-GNSS Raw Measurement and Built-In RTK Engine for Mass Market Applications: Ryan K.Y. Yang, Shi Xian Yang, Gary Hau, Chia Wei Sung, Hongtao Yu, Allystar Technology Co. Limited, Hong Kong
4:24 An Flexible Optimization Method for GNSS Receiver Design: Jing Ji, Wei Chen, Wuhan University of Technology, China; Hongyang Lu, Chengwei Huang, Jiantong Zhang, Satellite Navigation Division of China Transport Tele-communication & Information Center, China
4:46 Performance Analysis of Reference Oscilla-tors and Frequency Synthesizers for use in High-Fidelity Satellite Navigation RF Front-Ends: Andrew D. Braun, AFLCMC/EZAC; Sanjeev Gunawardena, Air Force Institute of Technology
Alternate 1. Static and Kinematic Testing and Analysis of the
Tallysman Veraphase VP6000 GNSS Antenna: Ryan M. White, Richard B. Langley, University of New Brunswick, Canada; Julien Hautcoeur, Tallysman Wireless Inc., Canada
Session A5: Navigation Methods for Autonomous Systems Room: Grand Ballroom EFG2:00 p.m. – 5:10 p.m.
2:05 Rural Positioning Challenges for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles: Joseph Walters, Xiaolin Meng, Chang Xu, Hao Jing, and Stuart Marsh, University of Nottingham, UK
2:27 2D Positioning of Ground Vehicles using Stereo Vision and a Single Ranging Link: Chen Zhu, Gabriele Giorgi, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany; Young-Hee Lee, Technical University of Munich (TUM), Germany; Christoph Günther, DLR, and TUM, Germany
2:49 Real-Time Drift-Free Path Recording and Replaying Based on Virtual Image Matching For MAVs: Ruihang Miao, Rendong Ying, Zheng Gong, Wuyang Xue, Xiangming Geng, Jun Shen and Peilin Liu, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, & Beijing Unistrong Science and Technology Co., Ltd., China
3:11 Place Classification and Semantic Mapping for MAV Applications: Jamal Atman, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany; Gert F. Trommer, ITE, KIT, Germany and ITMO University, Russia
3:40 Detection, Classification, and Tracking of Objects for Autonomous Vehicles: Milan Aryal and Nicholas Baine, Grand Valley State University
4:02 Accuracy and Availability of an Optical Positioning System for Aircraft Landing: Stephan Wolkow, Alexander Schwithal, Maik Angermann, Andreas Dekiert, Ulf Bestmann, TU Braunschweig, Institute of Flight Guidance, Germany
4:24 Advantages and Challenges of using Infrared Cameras for Relative Positioning during Landing: Andreas M. Dekiert, Stephan Wolkow, Maik Angermann, Ulf Bestmann and Peter Hecker, Institute of Flight Guidance, TU Braunschweig, Germany
4:46 Low CSWaP High Performance MEMS 6 DoF IMU for UV Navigation: R. Mark Boysel and Louis J. Ross, MEI Micro, Inc.
Alternate
1. Computationally Efficient Vision-based UAV Positioning: Joakim Rydell, Erika Bilock, Michael Tulldahl, Swedish Defence Research Agency (FOI), Sweden
Stefan Wallner, European Space Agency, The Netherlands
Dr. Changdon Kee, Seoul National University, South Korea
Dr. Stephan Weiss, Alpen-Adria Universität, Austria
Dr. Zhen Zhu, East Carolina University
Dr. Patrizia Tavella, Bureau International des Poids et Mesures
Dr. Jian Yao, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Dr. Zheng Yao, Tsinghua University, China
Dr. Cécile Mongrédien, u-blox, Switzerland
Dr. Judah Levine, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Dr. Elizabeth Laier-English, National Physical Laboratory, UK
EXHIBIT HALL
ITM/PTTI 2019
Show Hours:Tuesday, January 298:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Exhibitor Hosted Breakfast
Wednesday, January 308:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open
Exhibitors:• Brandywine Communications (Booth 5)• CAST Navigation (Booth 2)• Cycle GmbH (Booth 23)• ENSCO (Booth 24)• Frequency Electronics, Inc. (Booth 3)• The Institute of Navigation (Booth 7)• GuideTech (Booth 4)• Jackson Labs Technologies, Inc. (Booth 10)• Linear Photonics, LLC (Booth 8)• Masterclock, Inc. (Booth 1)• Microchip Technology Inc. (Booth 17)• Oscilloquartz SA (Booth 12)• Spectradynamics Inc. (Booth 20)• Spirent Federal Systems (Booth 13)• Sync-n-Scale (Booth 6)• Syntony GNSS (Booth 19)• TimeTech GmbH (Booth 16)• Vescent Photonics (Booth 22)
Bold = ION Corporate Member List current as of 1/9/19
Exhibit Hall Floor Plan:
Entrance
Att
ende
e D
inin
g A
rea
April 8-11, 2019Hilton Waikiki BeachHonolulu, Hawaii
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Where East Meets West
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EXHIBIT HALLApril 8-11, 2019Hilton Waikiki BeachHonolulu, Hawaii
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www.ion.org/pnt
Register and reserve your hotel room by March 8 to take advantage of discounted rates
Where East Meets West
in the Global Cooperative
Development of Positioning,
Navigation and Timing Technology
®
INSTITUTE OF NAVIGATION
Ground. Air. Space.Wireless distributed timing technology
www.ensco.com
Visit Booth #24 to learn more about ENSCO Coherent Link Technology
for distributed coherent networks in GPS‑denied environments.