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Science Requirements on Future Missions and Simulated Mission Scenarios
The science requirements on future gravity satellite missions, following from the previous contributions of this issue, are summarized and visualized in terms of spatial scales, temporal behaviour and accuracy. This summary serves the identification of four classes of future satellite mission of pot...
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Published in: | Earth, moon, and planets moon, and planets, 2004-04, Vol.94 (1-2), p.113-142 |
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container_end_page | 142 |
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container_title | Earth, moon, and planets |
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creator | Sneeuw, Nico Flury, Jakob Rummel, Reiner |
description | The science requirements on future gravity satellite missions, following from the previous contributions of this issue, are summarized and visualized in terms of spatial scales, temporal behaviour and accuracy. This summary serves the identification of four classes of future satellite mission of potential interest: high-altitude monitoring, satellite-to-satellite tracking, gradiometry, and formation flights. Within each class several variants are defined. The gravity recovery performance of each of these ideal missions is simulated. Despite some simplifying assumptions, these error simulations result in guidelines as to which type of mission fulfils which requirements best. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s11038-004-7605-x |
format | article |
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subjects | High altitude Magnetic measurement Satellite tracking Satellite-to-satellite tracking Satellites Science Simulation Space exploration Space missions |
title | Science Requirements on Future Missions and Simulated Mission Scenarios |
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