This paper presents the design, optimization, and performance evaluation of a Satellite-Based Augmentation System (SBAS) ground segment tailored to Colombia’s air navigation infrastructure, with emphasis on ionospheric anomalies in equatorial latitudes. The configuration comprises six Reference Stations (RIMS), strategically sited via geometric dilution of precision (GDOP) minimization and airspace demand models from ADS-B data. A simulation suite—integrating STK®, Radio Mobile™, and Stanford-ESA certified monitors—quantifies service volume, link margins, and protection level compliance. Ionospheric threat characterization uses regional scintillation datasets (σln ≈ 0.36, ROTI95 ≈ 85 mm/km), informing GIVE inflation and dual-frequency pseudorange integrity validation. Simulations confirm the system sustains ≥ 99.8% APV-I availability over the CAR/SAM FIR, with Horizontal and Vertical Protection Levels (HPL/VPL) bounded below 28 m and 46 m. Uplink integrity and GEO broadcast continuity are modelled under worst-case masking and multipath, confirming ICAO Annex 10 SARPs compliance. The architecture achieves a high performance-to-cost ratio, enabling nationwide SBAS coverage with a 65% cost reduction versus legacy navaids. The system is forward-compatible with dual-frequency multi-constellation SBAS (DFMC), supporting future APV-II scalability. These results position Colombia as a regional node for GNSS augmentation, fostering safety, efficiency, and procedural harmonization.
Orduy et al. (Wed,) studied this question.