National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CLIMATE MONITORING FROM SPACE -- challenges, actions & perspectives Yang Jun China Meteorological Administration WMO Cg-XVI Side Event An architecture.
Advertisements

Space-based Architecture for Climate Mary Kicza NOAA’s Assistant Administrator for Satellite and Information Services May 19, 2011.
Extract from Hot summary of the Fourth GSICS Users Workshop Fred Wu, Sebastien Wagner, Jerome Lafeuille Sopot, Poland, 4 September 2012.
1 AMS Weather and Climate Enterprise Summer Meeting Status of NESDIS Satellite Programs Mary E. Kicza Assistant Administrator for Satellites and Information.
Characterization of ATMS Bias Using GPSRO Observations Lin Lin 1,2, Fuzhong Weng 2 and Xiaolei Zou 3 1 Earth Resources Technology, Inc.
FIX_8 (High Accuracy Positioning using EGNOS and Galileo Products) Galileo SME Workshop 5 th & 6 th April 2006.
Ohio University Russ College of Engineering and Technology School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Avionics Engineering Center Ranjeet Shetty.
IROWG - CGMS IROWG Climate Activities Co-Chairs: Axel von Engeln (EUMETSAT), Dave Ector (UCAR) Rapporteur: Tony Mannucci (NASA/JPL)
1 DSN Network e-VLBI Calibration of Earth Orientation L. D. Zhang a,b, A. Steppe a, G. Lanyi a Presentation at 5-th International e-VLBI Workshop Westford,
1 Program:ROSA Mission Event:1° ASI-EUM ASI-meeting Date:4-5 February, 2009 ROSA Future developments and possible ASI / EUMETSAT cooperation.
Jairus Hihn Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Domain-Oriented Modeling, Estimation and Improvement for Aerospace November 2,
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California 1 GCSS Pacific Cross-section.
Observational Simulations in Support of CLARREO Development Collins Group Meeting October 10, 2008.
Laser Ranging Contributions to Earth Rotation Studies Richard S. Gross Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, CA 91109–8099,
Aviation Considerations for Multi-Constellation GNSS Leo Eldredge, GNSS Group Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) December 2008 Federal Aviation Administration.
RO Winds, Reanalysis, PPE Stephen Leroy 1, Chi Ao 2, Olga Verkhoglyadova 2 CLARREO SDT Meeting, April 16-18, 2013 NASA Langley Research Center 1 Harvard.
GCOS Meeting Seattle, May 06 Using GPS for Climate Monitoring Christian Rocken UCAR/COSMIC Program Office.
New Satellite Capabilities and Existing Opportunities Bill Kuo 1 and Chris Velden 2 1 National Center for Atmospheric Research 2 University of Wisconsin.
Use of GPS RO in Operations at NCEP
Common PDR Problems ACES Presentation T. Gregory Guzik March 6, 2003.
Mr.Samniang Suttara B.Eng. (Civil), M.Eng. (Survey) Topcon Instruments (Thailand) Co.,Ltd. Tel Satellite Surveying.
GBA IT Project Management Final Project - Establishment of a Project Management Management Office 10 July, 2003.
NGS GPS ORBIT DETERMINATION Positioning America for the Future NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION National Ocean Service National Geodetic.
CGMS-40, November 2012, Lugano, Switzerland Coordination Group for Meteorological Satellites - CGMS IROWG - Overview of and Plans for the Newest CGMS Working.
How Does GPS Work ?. Objectives To Describe: The 3 components of the Global Positioning System How position is obtaining from a radio timing signal Obtaining.
IGS Workshop 2008 The Galileo Ground Mission Segment Performances Francisco Amarillo-Fernandez, Massimo Crisci, Alexandre Ballereau John Dow, Martin Hollreiser,
CLARREO Mission Studies Overview David F. Young First CLARREO Mission Study Team Meeting Newport News, VA April 30 - May 2.
April 25, 2001 GSFC Data Systems Standards Management and CCSDS P1J Status Report NTAG Meeting April 25, 2001 Felipe Flores-Amaya GSFC/Code 572.
Geodetic Research Laboratory Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering University of New Brunswick 01/06/27 S.Bisnath A NEW TECHNIQUE FOR GPS-BASED.
01/0000 HEO and Daylight Ranging “Reality and Wishes” Ramesh Govind ILRS Fall Workshop, 4 th October 2005.
SI Traceability Applied to GPS RO October 22, 2008 CLARREO Workshop Oct 2008 AJM/JPL 1 SI Traceability Applied To GPS Radio Occultation A. J. Mannucci,
Slide 1 Second GPS/RO Users Workshop, August , The EUMETSAT Polar System GRAS SAF and Data Products Martin B. Sorensen GRAS SAF Project Atmosphere.
Use of GPS Radio Occultation Data for Climate Monitoring Y.-H. Kuo, C. Rocken, and R. A. Anthes University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.
GRAS SAF User Workshop June GRAS Level 1 Processing and Products Juha-Pekka Luntama and Julian Wilson EUMETSAT Am Kavalleriesand 31, D
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California Soil Moisture Active and.
Key RO Advances Observation –Lower tropospheric penetration (open loop / demodulation) –Larger number of profiles (rising & setting) –Detailed precision.
NASA Earth Science Perspective February 8, 2011 George J. Komar Associate Director/Program Manager Earth Science Technology Office.
Strategies and Innovative Approaches for the Future of Space-Weather Forecasting J Todd Hoeksema Stanford University.
1 An Overview of Recent Actions/Events to Assure a Continued OSVW Capability.
View on GPS and Galileo ‘From across the Atlantic…’ Ruth E. Neilan International GNSS Service (IGS) Central Bureau Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California.
J. Marr - 1 SIM MMR Space Interferometry Mission A NASA Origins Mission SIM 5/14/2004 Project Summary National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet.
1 Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory (CLARREO) Welcome David Young Project Scientist CLARREO Mission Formulation Team NASA Langley.
1 Science Definition Team Meeting National Aerospace Institute Hampton, VA Dec 1-3, 2015.
Radio Occultation. Temperature [C] at 100 mb (16km) Evolving COSMIC Constellation.
SRR and PDR Charter & Review Team Linda Pacini (GSFC) Review Chair.
Improving GPS RO Stratospheric Retrieval for Climate Benchmarking Chi O. Ao 1, Anthony J. Mannucci 1, E. Robert Kursinski 2 1 Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Information Quality Cluster - Introduction H. K. (Rama) Ramapriyan Science Systems and Applications, Inc. & NASA Goddard Space Flight Center David Moroni.
0 Earth Observation with COSMIC. 1 COSMIC at a Glance l Constellation Observing System for Meteorology Ionosphere and Climate (ROCSAT-3) l 6 Satellites.
This document contains proprietary and controlled information of National Space Organization (NSPO) of Taiwan and shall not be duplicated in whole or in.
Orbital Analysis for Inter-Calibration Dave Mac Donnell Brooke Anderson Bruce Wielicki Don Garber NASA Langley Research Center Solar Workshop January 30,
Towards a Robust and Model- Independent GNSS RO Climate Data Record Chi O. Ao and Anthony J. Mannucci 12/2/15CLARREO SDT Meeting, Hampton, VA1 © 2015 California.
IGARSS 2011, Vancuver, Canada July 28, of 14 Chalmers University of Technology Monitoring Long Term Variability in the Atmospheric Water Vapor Content.
SwCDR (Peer) Review 1 UCB MAVEN Particles and Fields Flight Software Critical Design Review Peter R. Harvey.
GPS Radio-Occultation data (COSMIC mission) Lidia Cucurull NOAA Joint Center for Satellite Data Assimilation.
University of Wyoming Financial Reporting Initiative Update April 2016.
NASA, CGMS-42 May 2014 Coordination Group for Meteorological Satellites - CGMS Update on Radio Occultation Activities at NASA Presented to CGMS-42 Working.
Younis H. Karim, AbidYahya School of Computer University Malaysia Perlis 1.
Workshop on Science Associated with the Lunar Exploration Architecture - Earth Science Subcommittee Theme: A Lunar-Based Earth Observatory Science Observations.
CEOS Response to GEOSS Water Strategy
Thomas Herring, IERS ACC, MIT
Radio Occultation and IROWG Matters Presented to CGMS-42 WGII session, agenda item 7 Co-Chairs: Axel von Engeln (EUMETSAT), Dave Ector (UCAR)
Report to 8th GSICS Exec Panel
CINEMA System Engineering
SI Traceability Applied To GPS Radio Occultation
Update on Advancing Development of the ROLO Lunar Calibration System
WG Climate, March 6 – 9, 2016 Paris, France
COSMIC Data Analysis and Archival Center
Comparability and Reproducibility of RO Data
Hot summary of the Fourth GSICS Users Workshop
The Future of COSMIC Where do we go from here?.
Presentation transcript:

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL GPS Radio Occultation Receiver For CLARREO FY 2009 Tasks Anthony J. Mannucci Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute Of Technology 1

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL TriG Overview A new GPS receiver design is needed for Decadal Survey missions, including CLARREO –Track modernized GPS and other systems (Galileo) –Track all-in-view –Improved precision and accuracy via higher antenna gain The TriG design meets stringent climate requirements for CLARREO Meets requirements for NOAA GPS-RO mission Also meets the most stringent mission navigation requirements from DESDynI and ICESAT-2 Continues climate time series started with COSMIC constellation of GPS receivers TriG 2

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL GPS Study Goals Define Level 1 requirements for GPS receiver on CLARREO –Traceable to science objectives Define implementation options –COTS? TriG? Other? –Trades: new signals, all in view, antenna, etc. Constellation descope implications –What constellation is required for RO science? Project-specific cost estimate and implementation timeline Integration and test – scope and cost estimate for CLARREO Antenna deployment environment Nominal schedule for delivery, test, operations Operations and data analysis plan 3

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL Determining Level 1 Requirements Relevant science objectives –Poleward motion of baroclinic zones (Leroy document Nov ‘08) –Other objectives (temperature trends, refractivity trends, what altitude range?) Level 1: –Refractivity accuracy and precision on a per-profile basis –Altitude range –Number of profiles/day in a given altitude range from the receiver –Method for estimating accuracy and precision 4

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL Flowdown From Level 1 Instrument and processing system requirements –Phase and range precision and accuracy vs. boresight angle –Antenna gain and phase error versus boresight angle –On-board processing requirements (# occs/day) Occultation scheduling Tracking algorithms –Processing system requirements: orbit determination accuracy, ionospheric calibration, etc. 5

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL Trades Key instrument trades: –Which signals? All-in-view? –Antenna gain requirements: precision and accuracy –Radiation tolerance/hardness –Parts reliability –Software class and methodology Constellation trades – sampling error –CLARREO may meet certain science objectives with one satellite (e.g. annual climatology) –Leveraging NOAA constellation –Recommendation: CLARREO keep the GPS receiver and develops design to stringent climate specifications Multipath environment, data processing strategy, testing and mission assurance methodology 6

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL Recent Activities Implementation plan for TriG receiver –Detailed cost and schedule ready in ~3 weeks –Descope options –Partnership with Broad Reach Engineering April workshop –Draft Level 1 requirements at a top level (broad view of objectives) –Systems engineering discussion –NOAA participation (other constellations) 7

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena, California CLARREO GPS RO/AJM-JPL Plans Goals for May 2009 –Define a baseline instrument, traceable to science objectives –Define baseline science data system –Baseline accommodation requirements (antenna placement) –Baseline integration and test strategy –Cost estimate, with uncertainties Goals following May 2009 –Constellation strategy and trades – which objectives are met with which constellation/sampling approach –Finalize GPS strategy – clearly justify GPS decision and possible coordination with NOAA constellation –Mission assurance approach and software class –Additional details on GPS receiver design and processing system –Coordination plan with Geodetic Observing System 8