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Orbit Determination Accuracy Analysis of the Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission During Perigee Raise
Author(s) -
D. Pachura,
Matthew A. Vavrina,
James R. Carpenter,
Cinnamon Wright
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
aiaa/aas astrodynamics specialist conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-4430
Subject(s) - orbit (dynamics) , aerospace engineering , low earth orbit , orbit determination , computer science , physics , aeronautics , astrobiology , engineering , satellite
The Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) Flight Dynamics Facility (FDF) will provide orbit determination and prediction support for the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission during the mission’s commissioning period. The spacecraft will launch into a highly elliptical Earth orbit in 2015. Starting approximately four days after launch, a series of five large perigee-raising maneuvers will be executed near apogee on a nearly every-other-orbit cadence. This perigee-raise operations concept requires a high-accuracy estimate of the orbital state within one orbit following the maneuver for performance evaluation and a high-accuracy orbit prediction to correctly plan and execute the next maneuver in the sequence. During early mission design, a linear covariance analysis method was used to study orbit determination and prediction accuracy for this perigee-raising campaign. This paper provides a higher fidelity Monte Carlo analysis using the operational COTS extended Kalman filter implementation that was performed to validate the linear covariance analysis estimates and to better characterize orbit determination performance for actively maneuvering spacecraft in a highly elliptical orbit. The study finds that the COTS extended Kalman filter tool converges on accurate definitive orbit solutions quickly, but prediction accuracy through orbits with very low altitude perigees is degraded by the unpredictability of atmospheric density variation.

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