DocumentCode :
1270121
Title :
Orbit Accuracy Requirement for ABYSS: The Space Station Radar Altimeter to Map Global Bathymetry
Author :
Shum, C.K. ; Abusali, P.A.M. ; Kuo, Chung-Yen ; Lee, Hyongki ; Ogle, James ; Raney, R. Keith ; Ries, John C. ; Smith, Walter H F ; Svehla, Drazen ; Zhao, Changyin
Author_Institution :
Div. of Geodetic Sci., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH, USA
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
fYear :
2009
Firstpage :
653
Lastpage :
657
Abstract :
The Altimetric Bathymetry from Surface Slopes (ABYSS), which is the proposed science payload on the International Space Station (ISS), is a Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory-developed flight-proved delay-Doppler phase-monopulse radar altimeter capable of measuring ocean surface slope in the 6-200-km half-wavelength frequency band range with an accuracy of 0.5 mu rad , with autonomous gimbal control to compensate for the ISS structural motions. This measurement allows an improved mapping of the global bathymetry, enabling a wide range of scientific research works and applications. The nonrepeat ISS orbital ground track is ideal for ABYSS. This letter describes a simulation study on the effects of the Earth´s gravity field and other errors, including thermal bending of the ISS, on the orbit determination of the altimeter instrument antenna phase center location, fulfilling the science objectives of ABYSS. Our study concluded that the error due to mean gravity field is no longer limiting due primarily to the recent Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment gravity modeling and that the ABYSS/ISS radial orbit slope error budget in the presence of various force and measurement model errors is estimated at the 0.2-mu rad root-sum-squared (RSS) level, which satisfies the ABYSS orbit accuracy science requirement to provide an improved mapping of global bathymetry.
Keywords :
Doppler radar; Earth orbit; bathymetry; gravity; ocean temperature; radar altimetry; remote sensing by radar; ABYSS; Altimetric Bathymetry from Surface Slopes; Earth gravity field; GRACE; Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment; ISS; International Space Station; Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory; delay-Doppler radar altimeter; map global bathymetry; ocean surface circulation; orbit accuracy requirement; root-sum-square; space station radar altimeter; Delay-Doppler altimetry; global bathymetry; ocean circulation; orbit determination; space station;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1545-598X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/LGRS.2009.2012877
Filename :
5184937
Link To Document :
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