Laplace plane and low inclination geosynchronous radar mission design

Date

2017-05-17

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Publisher

Springer

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Article

ISSN

1674-733X

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Citation

Stephen Hobbs, Joan Pau Sanchez, Laplace plane and low inclination geosynchronous radar mission design, Science China Information Sciences, Vol. 60, Issue 6, June 2017, article number 060305

Abstract

This study is inspired by the Laplace orbit plane property of requiring minimal station-keeping and therefore its potential use for long-term geosynchronous synthetic aperture radar (GEOSAR) imaging. A set of GEOSAR user requirements is presented and analysed to identify significant mission requirements. Imaging geometry and power demand are assessed as a function of relative satellite speed (which is determined largely by choice of orbit inclination). Estimates of the cost of station-keeping as a function of orbit inclination and right ascension are presented to compare the benefits of different orbit choices. The conclusion is that the Laplace plane (and more generally, orbits with inclinations up to 15°) are attractive choices for GEOSAR.

Description

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Keywords

Laplace plane, station-keeping, geosynchronous, inclination, GEOSAR

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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