Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links

Past temporal gravity field solutions from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), as well as current solutions from GRACE Follow-On, suffer from temporal aliasing errors due to undersampling of the signal to be recovered (e.g., hydrology), which arise in terms of stripes caused by the...

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Main Authors: Markus Hauk, Roland Pail
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-03-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/5/537
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spelling doaj-8e549692159344359ed121d19af8bf952020-11-25T01:06:37ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922019-03-0111553710.3390/rs11050537rs11050537Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite LinksMarkus Hauk0Roland Pail1Institute of Astronomical and Physical Geodesy, Technical University of Munich, Arcisstrasse 21, 80333 Munich, GermanyInstitute of Astronomical and Physical Geodesy, Technical University of Munich, Arcisstrasse 21, 80333 Munich, GermanyPast temporal gravity field solutions from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), as well as current solutions from GRACE Follow-On, suffer from temporal aliasing errors due to undersampling of the signal to be recovered (e.g., hydrology), which arise in terms of stripes caused by the north–south observation direction. In this paper, we investigate the potential of the proposed mass variation observing system by high–low inter-satellite links (MOBILE) mission. We quantify the impact of instrument errors of the main sensors (inter-satellite link and accelerometer) and high-frequency tidal and non-tidal gravity signals on achievable performance of the temporal gravity field retrieval. The multi-directional observation geometry of the MOBILE concept with a strong dominance of the radial component result in a close-to-isotropic error behavior, and the retrieved gravity field solutions show reduced temporal aliasing errors of at least 30% for non-tidal, as well as tidal, mass variation signals compared to a low–low satellite pair configuration. The quality of the MOBILE range observations enables the application of extended alternative processing methods leading to further reduction of temporal aliasing errors. The results demonstrate that such a mission can help to get an improved understanding of different components of the Earth system.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/5/537mass transport in the Earth systemGRACE and GRACE Follow-On missioncurrent and future observation concepts and instruments
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Markus Hauk
Roland Pail
spellingShingle Markus Hauk
Roland Pail
Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links
Remote Sensing
mass transport in the Earth system
GRACE and GRACE Follow-On mission
current and future observation concepts and instruments
author_facet Markus Hauk
Roland Pail
author_sort Markus Hauk
title Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links
title_short Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links
title_full Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links
title_fullStr Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links
title_full_unstemmed Gravity Field Recovery Using High-Precision, High–Low Inter-Satellite Links
title_sort gravity field recovery using high-precision, high–low inter-satellite links
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Past temporal gravity field solutions from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), as well as current solutions from GRACE Follow-On, suffer from temporal aliasing errors due to undersampling of the signal to be recovered (e.g., hydrology), which arise in terms of stripes caused by the north–south observation direction. In this paper, we investigate the potential of the proposed mass variation observing system by high–low inter-satellite links (MOBILE) mission. We quantify the impact of instrument errors of the main sensors (inter-satellite link and accelerometer) and high-frequency tidal and non-tidal gravity signals on achievable performance of the temporal gravity field retrieval. The multi-directional observation geometry of the MOBILE concept with a strong dominance of the radial component result in a close-to-isotropic error behavior, and the retrieved gravity field solutions show reduced temporal aliasing errors of at least 30% for non-tidal, as well as tidal, mass variation signals compared to a low–low satellite pair configuration. The quality of the MOBILE range observations enables the application of extended alternative processing methods leading to further reduction of temporal aliasing errors. The results demonstrate that such a mission can help to get an improved understanding of different components of the Earth system.
topic mass transport in the Earth system
GRACE and GRACE Follow-On mission
current and future observation concepts and instruments
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/11/5/537
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