Benefits of a Geosynchronous Orbit (GEO) Observation Point for Orbit Determination

Ray Byrne (Sandia National Laboratories), Michael Griesmeyer (Sandia National Laboratories), Ron Schmidt (Sandia National Laboratories), Jeff Shaddix (Sandia National Laboratories), Dave Bodette (Sandia National Laboratories)

Keywords: Orbit determination, SSA

Abstract:

Determining orbits of unknown objects is a fundamental space situational awareness activity. The U.S. Space Surveillance Network (SSN) currently relies on ground-based radars, optical telescopes, and the Space Based Space Surveillance (SBSS) System. The SBSS system overcomes many of the pitfalls of optical ground-based systems like limited observation times (e.g. weather and time of day) and measurement uncertainty from atmospheric effects. However, the SBSS satellite is in a low earth orbit (630 km, sun synchronous), and must look “up” for GEO objects. This paper analyzes the potential benefits of a GEO observation point for performing metric observations that are combined with ground-based data. Several different scenarios are considered to quantify the reduction in orbit uncertainty from these types of observations. All results are derived using an Extended Kalman filter (EKF) to process the observations. Orbital uncertainties are expressed in terms of the error covariance.

Date of Conference: September 13-16, 2011

Track: Poster

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