ANALYSIS OF DATA FROM THE REGINA KITG STATION LOCATED IN UZBEKISTAN
Abstract
The REGINA Project is a collaboration between CNES and IGN set up in 2012. The REGINA infrastructure is based on a global network of more than 30 GNSS stations (see list of stations in Fig.1), equipped with receivers capable of acquiring signals from current and future navigation systems (in particular GPS, GLONASS, GALILEO, BEIDOU and various SBAS) and provide real-time (RT) and non-real time (DT) data streams [1].
References
REFERENCES:
https://regina.cnes.fr/en/stations/KITG.
REGINA project: https://regina.cnes.fr/en/general-presentation.
Herring T.A., King R.W., Floyd M., McClusky S.C. Introduction to GAMIT/GLOBK. Release 10.7. Technical report. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. http://geoweb.mit.edu/gg/Intro_GG.pdf .
King R.W., Herring T.A., Floyd M.A., McClusky S.C. GAMIT/GLOBK.
IERS Conventions // IERS Technical Note 36 / Gérard Petit and Brian Luzum (eds.). –Frankfurt am Main: Verlag des Bundesamts für Kartographie und Geodäsie. –2010. –P. 179.
Herring T.A., King R.W., McClusky S.C. Global Kalman filter VLBI and GPS analysis program, GLOBK Reference Manual, Release 10.5. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge MA 2010b.