GNSS RTK
Global Navigation Satellite System Real-Time Kinematic (GNSS RTK) is a high-precision positioning technique that uses carrier phase measurements from a reference receiver at a known location to correct the position estimates of a rover receiver in real time. Developed in the 1980s, RTK exploits spatial correlation of atmospheric errors to achieve centimeter-level accuracy within tens of kilometers of the reference station. RTK is now standard in surveying, construction, autonomous vehicles, and precision agriculture.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Teunissen, P. J. G., & Kleusberg, A. (Eds.). (2003). GPS for Geodesy (2nd ed.). Springer-Verlag. · URL
- Hofmann-Wellenhof, B., Lichtenegger, H., & Wasle, E. (2005). GNSS Global Navigation Satellite Systems: GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, and more. Springer-Verlag. · URL
- Groves, P. D. (2008). Principles of GNSS, Inertial, and Multisensor Integrated Navigation Systems. Artech House. · URL
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