Design of future Earth observing mass change constellations using small satellites.

Deccia, C.M.A., D. Wiese, . Loomis, and R. Nerem (2020), Design of future Earth observing mass change constellations using small satellites., AGU Fall Meeting 2020, Dec. 1-17, Online.
Abstract

After the successful Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission, which ended in 2017, GRACE Follow-On was launched in 2018. Together, these missions have provided almost two decades of near-continuous information on the Earth's time-varying gravity field. Single pairs of satellites like GRACE and GRACE-FO are inherently limited in their spatio-temporal coverage, spatially to a few hundred kilometers and temporally to a roughly monthly resolution. In order to increase the global spatio-temporal resolution and therefore allow for the determination of submonthly time-varying gravity field events, a constellation of GRACE-type pairs has been studied. 
Small satellite instrumentation is becoming increasingly affordable, reliable and precise. This will soon allow a constellation of GRACE-type small satellites to be deployed. In this work we investigate the performance of such a constellation for different numbers of satellite pairs using simulation studies which include different orbital con¦gurations. We design constellations using an evolutionary algorithm approach to optimize spatial and temporal resolution given a set of N satellite pairs. This allows us to evaluate the improved spatio-temporal performance, and thus the science return, that might be gained from such future mission architectures.

Research Program
Earth Surface & Interior Program (ESI)
Mission
GRACE FO
Location
Online
Conference
AGU Fall Meeting 2020
Conference Date
-
Funding Sources
NASA Earth and Space Sciences Fellowship - Grant: 18-EARTH18F-0380

 

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