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Date
2020-11-10Type
- Other Conference Item
ETH Bibliography
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Abstract
Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) have been used as a key technology for satellite orbit determination for about 30 years. With the increasing popularity of miniaturized satellites (e.g., CubeSats that are nanosatellites based on standardized 10 cm-sized units) the need for an adapted payload for orbit determination arises. We developed a small-size versatile GNSS payload board using commercial off-the-shelf single-frequency GNSS receivers with extremely small weight (1.6 g), size (12.2 x 16.0 x 2.4 mm3) and power consumption (100 mW). The board features two separate antenna connectors and four GNSS receivers – two connected to each antenna. This redundancy lowers the risk of a total payload failure in case one receiver is malfunctioning. Two prototypes of the GNSS positioning board have been successfully launched onboard the Astrocast-01 and -02 3-unit cube satellites with altitudes of 575 and 505 km, respectively. In addition, both satellites are equipped with a small array of three laser retroreflectors enabling orbit validation with Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR). After the two precursor missions, a constellation of 80 satellites is planned, allowing the formation and computation of a highly uniform polyhedron in space with cm-accuracy, relevant for geocenter, reference frame, and GNSS orbit determination. At present, we have continuous receiver PVT solutions available. The real-time onboard orbit determination results indicate that the receivers perform very well on both satellites. The RMS of a daily orbit fitting is, after removing one or the other outlier, at the level of 2-5 meters despite errors caused by the ionosphere and the orbit model. For a few satellite arcs the recording of GNSS raw phase and code data was enabled, allowing orbit determination in a post-processing mode. This allows a better assessment of the achievable orbit quality and overall performance estimation. The tests performed so far include the improvement of the orbit quality by eliminating the ionospheric refraction based on a linear combination of phase and code observations, the comparison of various single-system solutions and advances in combining the different tracking systems for orbit determination. In collaboration with the Zimmerwald Observatory in Switzerland, a first SLR campaign was conducted that successfully tracked both nanosatellites. The SLR measurements with their high accuracy were then analyzed to validate the orbits of the Astrocast satellites derived from GNSS measurements. Astrocast satellite also carries small thrusters that are used for orbit maintenance. Precise estimation of the thrust force acting on satellite using GNSS data could be performed allowing a rigorous assessment of the thruster system. We will present details on the orbit determination in real-time and in post-processing mode based on the low-cost single-frequency multi-GNSS receivers onboard the satellites, the SLR orbit validation, and the analysis of the actual maneuver performance. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000459698Publication status
publishedPublisher
ETH Zurich, Institute of Geodesy and PhotogrammetryEvent
Subject
CubeSats for Scientific and Civil-use Studies of the EarthOrganisational unit
03824 - Rothacher, Markus (emeritus) / Rothacher, Markus (emeritus)
Notes
Conference postponed due to Corona virus (COVID-19), and renamed COSPAR 2021More
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ETH Bibliography
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