Narrow Shielded Spaces: Analysis of BDS Navigation Signal Feature Establishment and Spectrum Map Network Design
Heng Zhang, Baoguo Yu, Shuguo Pan, Chuanzhen Sheng, Shiyuan Liu, Jianqiang Cheng, Shitong DuLong and narrow shielded confined spaces, represented by traffic tunnels and underground utility tunnels, constitute critical application scenarios for indoor and underground positioning services. Despite their relatively simple geometric configurations, such environments suffer from severe spatial distortion of geometric dilution of precision (GDOP). Coupled with pervasive low-elevation signal propagation and intensive multipath reflection effects, conventional BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) positioning services are unable to provide continuous and reliable coverage in these scenarios. To date, existing research on high-precision pseudolite positioning for narrow confined spaces remains largely confined to theoretical analysis and laboratory experimental verification, while systematic studies on application-oriented signal atlas feature network design are significantly insufficient, forming a prominent gap that restricts the practical engineering deployment of relevant technologies. To address the aforementioned technical bottlenecks, this paper proposes a novel BDS pseudolite signal atlas network design method to improve the continuity, stability and comprehensive positioning performance in spatially distorted narrow shielded environments. Field vehicular tests were carried out in actual engineering tunnels and underground utility tunnels to systematically analyze the variation characteristics of raw BDS pseudolite observation data, including pseudorange, carrier phase, carrier-to-noise ratio (C/N0) and Doppler shift. The test results verified that kinematic Doppler parameters exhibited outstanding stability in complex shielded environments with strong multipath interference. On this basis, a spatial feature model based on kinematic Doppler measurements was constructed, and wavelet denoising technology was adopted to extract effective typical spatial feature parameters. Combined with the deterministic one-to-one mapping relationship between Doppler peak characteristics and spatial positions, a multi-peak kinematic Doppler atlas was established, which eliminates the dependence on pre-deployment data collection, dedicated database construction and offline model training. Furthermore, comprehensively considering multi-dimensional constraints such as spatial environment scale, carrier dynamic characteristics and terminal output rate, the atlas network scheme was optimized to achieve a balanced trade-off among positioning detection accuracy, absolute positioning precision and suppression of the pseudolite near-far effect. Comparative experimental results demonstrate that the proposed BDS pseudolite atlas network effectively resolves the inherent GNSS positioning difficulty in long and narrow shielded spaces. Benefiting from the rational spectral peak configuration strategy, the system can satisfy the continuous and stable positioning requirements of multiple carrier types including motor vehicles and railway locomotives under variable motion speeds and terminal output rates. This study provides a robust and feasible technical solution for high-precision BDS positioning services in long and narrow shielded confined spaces, and holds favorable engineering application prospects for underground navigation scenarios.