DocumentCode :
1935331
Title :
The measurement of Titan rotational state by means of SAR imaging
Author :
Marmo, P. Persi del ; Iess, L. ; Picardi, G. ; Seu, R.
Author_Institution :
Dipt. di Ing. Aerospaziale ed Astronautica, Univ. La Sapienza, Rome
fYear :
2008
fDate :
26-30 May 2008
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
The rotational state of a planet or satellite bears crucial physical information on the bodypsilas dynamical evolution and deep internal structure. For planets or satellites in a Cassini state the obliquity (the angle between the rotational and orbital angular momentum) and physical librations, combined with the measurement of the second degree coefficients of the gravity field, could provide the value of the moments of inertia and reveal the existence of a fluid core (as in the case of Mercury). As ground measurements by means of radar or optical observations are usually not sufficiently accurate and long-life landers have rarely been available, one must rely on orbiting spacecraft for building a body-fixed frame and linking it to a celestial inertial frame. This paper presents a method for estimating the obliquity by comparing image pairs of surface landmarks, taken by an orbiter at different positions along the bodypsilas orbit. The algorithm estimates the vectorial angular velocity, thus providing a body-fixed reference frame. While optical imaging is preferred due to the high angular resolution of planetary cameras, for bodies with a thick atmosphere one has to rely on SAR data. This work presents the result of the estimation of Titanpsilas obliquity and length of day using a combination of SAR imaging of surface landmarks and precise spacecraft positioning of the Cassini spacecraft. We show that the Cassini data provide the pole position and length of day with an accuracy suitable for geophysical interpretation. The main results are a non-synchronous rotation and a pole position compatible with the occupancy of a Cassini state.
Keywords :
radar imaging; space vehicles; synthetic aperture radar; Cassini data; Cassini spacecraft positioning; Cassini state; SAR data; SAR imaging; Titan rotational state; body-fixed frame; body-fixed reference frame; celestial inertial frame; fluid core; geophysical interpretation; gravity field; nonsynchronous rotation; optical imaging; optical observation; orbiting spacecraft; planetary cameras; pole position; radar observation; synthetic aperture radar; vectorial angular velocity; Extraterrestrial measurements; Geophysical measurements; Gravity; Laser radar; Planetary orbits; Planets; Radar polarimetry; Rotation measurement; Satellites; Space vehicles; SAR; Titan; pole; rotation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Radar Conference, 2008. RADAR '08. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Rome
ISSN :
1097-5659
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1538-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1097-5659
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/RADAR.2008.4721075
Filename :
4721075
Link To Document :
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