*Article* **Performance of Multi-GNSS in the Asia-Pacific Region: Signal Quality, Broadcast Ephemeris and Precise Point Positioning (PPP)**

**Mengyuan Li 1, Guanwen Huang 1,2,\*, Le Wang 1, Wei Xie <sup>1</sup> and Fan Yue <sup>1</sup>**


**Abstract:** Since BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) and Japan's Quasi-Zenith Satellite System (QZSS) have more visible satellites in the Asia-Pacific region, and navigation satellites of Global Positioning System (GPS), Galileo satellite navigation system (Galileo), and GLONASS satellite navigation system (GLONASS) are uniformly distributed globally, the service level of multi-mode Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) in the Asia-Pacific region should represent the best service capability. Based on the observation data of 10 Multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) stations, broadcast ephemeris and precision ephemeris from 13 to 19 October 2021, this paper comprehensively evaluated the service capability of multi-GNSS in the Asia-Pacific region from three aspects of observation data quality, broadcast ephemeris performance, and precision positioning level. The results show that: (1) the carrier-to-noise-density ratio (C/N0) quality of the GPS and Galileo is the best, followed by BDS and GLONASS, and QZSS is the worst. GPS, BDS-2, GLONASS, and QZSS pseudorange multipath values range from 0 to 0.6 m, while Galileo system and BDS-3 pseudorange multipath values range from 0 to 0.8 m. (2) In terms of broadcast ephemeris accuracy, BDS-3 broadcast ephemeris has the best orbit, and the three-dimensional (3D) Root Mean Square (RMS) is 0.21 m; BDS-2 was the worst, with a 3D RMS of 1.99 m. The broadcast ephemeris orbits of GPS, Galileo, QZSS, and GLONASS have 3D RMS of 0.60 m, 0.62 m, 0.83 m, and 1.27 m, respectively. For broadcast ephemeris clock offset: Galileo has the best performance, 0.61 ns, GLONASS is the worst, standard deviation (STD) is 3.10 ns, GPS, QZSS, BDS-3 and BDS-2 are 0.65 ns, 0.75 ns, and 1.72 ns, respectively. For signal-in-space ranging errors (SISRE), the SISRE results of GPS and Galileo systems are the best, fluctuating in the range of 0 m–2 m, followed by QZSS, BDS-3, Galileo, and BDS-2. (3) GPS, BDS, GLONASS, Galileo, GPS/QZSS, and BDS/QZSS were used for positioning experiments. In static PPP, the convergence time and positioning accuracy of GPS show the best performance. The positioning accuracy of GPS/QZSS and BDS/QZSS is improved compared with that of GPS and BDS. In terms of kinematic PPP, the convergence time and positioning accuracy of GPS/QZSS and BDS/QZSS are improved compared with that of GPS and BDS. In addition to GLONASS and Galileo systems, the other combinations outperformed 3 cm, 3 cm, and 5 cm in the east, north, and up directions.

**Keywords:** C/N0; pseudorange multipath; broadcast ephemeris clock offset accuracy; broadcast ephemeris orbit accuracy; SISRE; PPP
