Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects

The number of man-made space objects is dramatically growing nowadays. The continuous monitoring and studying of these objects are necessary to keep their number under control and ensure safe space operations. With respect thereto, international guidelines recommend decongesting the most populated s...

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Main Author: Ngo, Phuong Linh
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Luleå tekniska universitet, Rymdteknik 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-81475
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-ltu-814752020-11-25T05:31:45ZDetection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objectsengNgo, Phuong LinhLuleå tekniska universitet, Rymdteknik2020manoeuvre detectiongeostationary orbitperturbationsfiltersTwo-line elementsstation keepingOther Earth and Related Environmental SciencesAnnan geovetenskap och miljövetenskapOther Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specifiedÖvrig annan teknikComputer SciencesDatavetenskap (datalogi)Other Physics TopicsAnnan fysikThe number of man-made space objects is dramatically growing nowadays. The continuous monitoring and studying of these objects are necessary to keep their number under control and ensure safe space operations. With respect thereto, international guidelines recommend decongesting the most populated space regions from satellites arriving at the end of their operational lifetime by performing post-mission disposal strategies. In general, a satellite is considered to be functional if it is still performing periodic manoeuvres to stay within the orbital operation configuration. This study presents a promising method to detect historical in-plane manoeuvrers of satellites on a geostationary orbit (GEO). Since a manoeuvrer changes the orbital state of the spacecraft, its effect can be detected by comparing the observed data to a reference evolution. In this case, the  model is represented by the dynamical model STELA  based on a semi-analytical theory. The observed data is provided by the public American space object catalogue. The Two-line element (TLE) database contains the orbital state of each tracked object, however, not all six orbital parameters are interesting to study in terms of in- plane manoeuvrers. The evolution of the longitude and of the eccentricity vector is immediately affected by a manoeuvre that changes the shape or the size of an orbit. Within the longitude analysis, the manoeuvre epoch is estimated by focusing on the manoeuvre strategy. An operational spacecraft usually performs a manoeuvre as soon as the longitude motion threatens to violate the operational deadband. Consequently, the longitude evolution follows a parabolic motion. Two polynomial curves of second degree are laid over the observation: the first curve is derived from a simplified dynamical model and the second curve is directly obtained through a Least Squares (LS) fitting method. The discrepancy between the LS and physical fitted parabolas gives an indication on the quality of the input data, that is to say, of the TLEs. The detected manoeuvre epoch must be companioned by a confidential parameter that denotes the time range around the estimated epoch in which the manoeuvre is expected to have happened. The manoeuvre interval is then forwarded to the eccentricity analysis where the manoeuvrer epoch is estimated more precisely by studying the divergence between the observed and expected eccentricity vector evolution. The latter is propagated with STELA after having estimated the area-to-mass ratio that is needed in order to model the perturbation effects accurately upon which the performance of the dynamical reference model strongly depends. As soon as the observed eccentricity vector deviates significantly from the expected evolution, the epoch and the velocity ΔV of the manoeuvre can be recovered, too. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-81475application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic manoeuvre detection
geostationary orbit
perturbations
filters
Two-line elements
station keeping
Other Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
Annan geovetenskap och miljövetenskap
Other Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specified
Övrig annan teknik
Computer Sciences
Datavetenskap (datalogi)
Other Physics Topics
Annan fysik
spellingShingle manoeuvre detection
geostationary orbit
perturbations
filters
Two-line elements
station keeping
Other Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
Annan geovetenskap och miljövetenskap
Other Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specified
Övrig annan teknik
Computer Sciences
Datavetenskap (datalogi)
Other Physics Topics
Annan fysik
Ngo, Phuong Linh
Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
description The number of man-made space objects is dramatically growing nowadays. The continuous monitoring and studying of these objects are necessary to keep their number under control and ensure safe space operations. With respect thereto, international guidelines recommend decongesting the most populated space regions from satellites arriving at the end of their operational lifetime by performing post-mission disposal strategies. In general, a satellite is considered to be functional if it is still performing periodic manoeuvres to stay within the orbital operation configuration. This study presents a promising method to detect historical in-plane manoeuvrers of satellites on a geostationary orbit (GEO). Since a manoeuvrer changes the orbital state of the spacecraft, its effect can be detected by comparing the observed data to a reference evolution. In this case, the  model is represented by the dynamical model STELA  based on a semi-analytical theory. The observed data is provided by the public American space object catalogue. The Two-line element (TLE) database contains the orbital state of each tracked object, however, not all six orbital parameters are interesting to study in terms of in- plane manoeuvrers. The evolution of the longitude and of the eccentricity vector is immediately affected by a manoeuvre that changes the shape or the size of an orbit. Within the longitude analysis, the manoeuvre epoch is estimated by focusing on the manoeuvre strategy. An operational spacecraft usually performs a manoeuvre as soon as the longitude motion threatens to violate the operational deadband. Consequently, the longitude evolution follows a parabolic motion. Two polynomial curves of second degree are laid over the observation: the first curve is derived from a simplified dynamical model and the second curve is directly obtained through a Least Squares (LS) fitting method. The discrepancy between the LS and physical fitted parabolas gives an indication on the quality of the input data, that is to say, of the TLEs. The detected manoeuvre epoch must be companioned by a confidential parameter that denotes the time range around the estimated epoch in which the manoeuvre is expected to have happened. The manoeuvre interval is then forwarded to the eccentricity analysis where the manoeuvrer epoch is estimated more precisely by studying the divergence between the observed and expected eccentricity vector evolution. The latter is propagated with STELA after having estimated the area-to-mass ratio that is needed in order to model the perturbation effects accurately upon which the performance of the dynamical reference model strongly depends. As soon as the observed eccentricity vector deviates significantly from the expected evolution, the epoch and the velocity ΔV of the manoeuvre can be recovered, too.
author Ngo, Phuong Linh
author_facet Ngo, Phuong Linh
author_sort Ngo, Phuong Linh
title Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
title_short Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
title_full Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
title_fullStr Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
title_full_unstemmed Detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
title_sort detection of in-plane orbital manoeuvres from a catalogue of geostationary objects
publisher Luleå tekniska universitet, Rymdteknik
publishDate 2020
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-81475
work_keys_str_mv AT ngophuonglinh detectionofinplaneorbitalmanoeuvresfromacatalogueofgeostationaryobjects
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