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Towards the GEOSAT Follow-On Precise Orbit Determination Goals of High Accuracy and Near-Real-Time Processing
Author(s) -
F. G. Lemoine,
N. P. Zelensky,
D. S. Chinn,
B. D. Beckley,
John Lillibridge
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
aiaa/aas astrodynamics specialist conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2006-6402
Subject(s) - computer science , orbit (dynamics) , orbit determination , real time computing , remote sensing , geodesy , aerospace engineering , geology , telecommunications , engineering , global positioning system
The US Navy's GEOSAT Follow-On spacecraft (GFO) primary mission objective is to map the oceans using a radar altimeter. Satellite laser ranging data, especially in combination with altimeter crossover data, offer the only means of determining high-quality precise orbits. Two tuned gravity models, PGS7727 and PGS7777b, were created at NASA GSFC for GFO that reduce the predicted radial orbit through degree 70 to 13.7 and 10.0 mm. A macromodel was developed to model the nonconservative forces and the SLR spacecraft measurement offset was adjusted to remove a mean bias. Using these improved models, satellite-ranging data, altimeter crossover data, and Doppler data are used to compute both daily medium precision orbits with a latency of less than 24 hours. Final precise orbits are also computed using these tracking data and exported with a latency of three to four weeks to NOAA for use on the GFO Geophysical Data Records (GDR s). The estimated orbit precision of the daily orbits is between 10 and 20 cm, whereas the precise orbits have a precision of 5 cm.

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