Error Reduction Analysis and Optimization of Varying GRACE-Type Micro-Satellite Constellations
Abstract
The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission has been a principal contributor in the study and quantification of Earth's time-varying gravity field. Both GRACE and its successor, GRACE Follow-On, are limited by their paired satellite design which only provide a full map of Earth's gravity field approximately every thirty days and at large spatial resolutions of over 300 km. Micro-satellite technology has presented the feasibility of improving the architecture of future missions to address these issues with the implementation of a constellations of satellites having similar characteristics as GRACE. To optimize the constellation's architecture, several scenarios are evaluated to determine how implementing this configuration affects the resultant gravity field maps and characterize which instrument system errors improve, which do not, and how changes in constellation architecture affect these errors.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.G31B0920W
- Keywords:
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- 1214 Geopotential theory and determination;
- GEODESY AND GRAVITY;
- 1217 Time variable gravity;
- GEODESY AND GRAVITY;
- 1225 Global change from geodesy;
- GEODESY AND GRAVITY;
- 1241 Satellite geodesy: technical issues;
- GEODESY AND GRAVITY