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  • ASTRODYNAMICS  (6)
  • 1990-1994  (5)
  • 1985-1989  (1)
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  • 1990-1994  (5)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The ability to determine accurate global sea level variations is important to both detection and understanding of changes in climate patterns. Sea level variability occurs over a wide spectrum of temporal and spatial scales, and precise global measurements are only recently possible with the advent of spaceborne satellite radar altimetry missions. One of the inherent requirements for accurate determination of absolute sea surface topography is that the altimetric satellite orbits be computed with sub-decimeter accuracy within a well defined terrestrial reference frame. SLR tracking in support of precision orbit determination of altimetric satellites is significant. Recent examples are the use of SLR as the primary tracking systems for TOPEX/Poseidon and for ERS-1 precision orbit determination. The current radial orbit accuracy for TOPEX/Poseidon is estimated to be around 3-4 cm, with geographically correlated orbit errors around 2 cm. The significance of the SLR tracking system is its ability to allow altimetric satellites to obtain absolute sea level measurements and thereby provide a link to other altimetry measurement systems for long-term sea level studies. SLR tracking allows the production of precise orbits which are well centered in an accurate terrestrial reference frame. With proper calibration of the radar altimeter, these precise orbits, along with the altimeter measurements, provide long term absolute sea level measurements. The U.S. Navy's Geosat mission is equipped with only Doppler beacons and lacks laser retroreflectors. However, its orbits, and even the Geosat orbits computed using the available full 40-station Tranet tracking network, yield orbits with significant north-south shifts with respect to the IERS terrestrial reference frame. The resulting Geosat sea surface topography will be tilted accordingly, making interpretation of long-term sea level variability studies difficult.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center, Satellite Laser Ranging in the 1990s: Report of the 1994 Belmont Workshop; p 65-70
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A technique which employs dual satellite crossover measurements from ERS-1 and Topology Ocean Experiment (TOPEX)/Poseidon together with laser tracking data and single satellite crossover measurements for ERS-1 precision orbit determination is described. The accuracy assessment of the resulting ERS-1 orbit is provided. Results of global verification of the ERS-1 Ocean Products (OPR02) and the Interim Geophysical Data Records (IGDR) data products in terms of altimeter bias, time lag bias and sea state bias are presented.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of 2nd ERS-1 Symposium on Space at the Service of Our Environment, Volume 2; p 747-752
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Starlette Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR) data were used, along with several other satellite data sets, for the solution of a preliminary gravity field model for TOPEX, PTGF1. A further improvement in the earth gravity model was accomplished using data collected by 12 satellites to solve another preliminary gravity model for TOPEX, designated PTGF2. The solution for the Earth Rotation Parameter (ERP) was derived from the analysis of SLR data to Starlette during the MERIT Campaign. Starlette orbits in 1976 and 1983 were analyzed for the mapping of the tidal response of the earth. Publications and conference presentations pertinent to research are listed.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: NASA-CR-180596 , NAS 1.26:180596
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The ability of radar altimeters to measure the distance from a satellite to the ocean surface with a precision of the order of 2 cm imposes unique requirements for the orbit determination accuracy. The orbit accuracy requirements will be especially demanding for the joint NASA/CNES Ocean Topography Experiment (Topex/Poseidon). For this mission, a radial orbit accuracy of 13 centimeters will be required for a mission period of three to five years. This is an order of magnitude improvement in the accuracy achieved during any previous satellite mission. This investigation considers the factors which limit the orbit accuracy for the Topex mission. Particular error sources which are considered include the geopotential, the radiation pressure and the atmospheric drag model.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: Advances in Space Research (ISSN 0273-1177); 10; 4-Mar
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Precise ephemerides have been determined for the U.S. Navy Geosat Exact Repeat Mission (ERM) using an improved gravity-field model, PTGF-4A (Shum et al. 1989). The Geosat orbits were computed in a terrestrial reference system which is tied to the reference system defined by satellite laser ranging (SLR) to Lageos through a survey between the Tranet Doppler receiver and the SLR system located at Wettzell, FRG. The remaining Doppler tracking station coordinates were estimated simultaneously with the geopotential in the PTGF-4A solution. In this analysis, three continuous 17-day Geosat orbits, which were computed using the 46-station Tranet data and global altimeter crossover data, have a crossover residual rms of 20 cm, indicating that the Geosat radial orbit error is of the order of 20 cm. The orbits computed based on data collected by a 7-station OPNET tracking network and crossover data have the same level of accuracy.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 95; 2887-289
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Accurate orbit determination and the recovery of geophysical parameters are presently attempted via methodologies which use differenced height measurements at the points where the ground tracks of the altimetric satellite orbits intersect. Such 'crossover measurements' could significantly improve the earth's gravity field model. Attention is given to a novel technique employing crossover measurements from two satellites carrying altimeter instruments; this method can observe zonal harmonics of the earth's geopotential which are weakly observed through single-satellite crossovers. This dual-satellite crossover technique will be applicable to data from such future oceanographic satellites as ERS-1.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: Journal of the Astronautical Sciences (ISSN 0021-9142); 38; 355-368
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