A method to determine regional lunar gravity fields from earth-based satellite tracking data

A method to determine regional gravity fields of the Moon from Earth-based Doppler and range satellite tracking data residuals of a low Moon-orbiting satellite has been developed and thoroughly tested in a controlled simulation environment. A short-arc approach, where one arc consists of the time it...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPlanetary and space science Vol. 53; no. 13; pp. 1331 - 1340
Main Authors Goossens, S., Visser, P.N.A.M., Ambrosius, B.A.C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.11.2005
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Summary:A method to determine regional gravity fields of the Moon from Earth-based Doppler and range satellite tracking data residuals of a low Moon-orbiting satellite has been developed and thoroughly tested in a controlled simulation environment. A short-arc approach, where one arc consists of the time it takes the satellite to cross the grid of interest on the lunar surface, is used in order to filter out most long-wavelength signal that can still be present in the residuals. Simulation results where the data are contaminated with either typical systematic or stochastic noise show that recovery of the local gravity field down to the level of several mGal is possible. The inclusion of extremely low-altitude data also means that regularisation in the sense of including a priori information in the form of a regularisation matrix is not necessary in order to obtain a good solution at high resolution.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0032-0633
1873-5088
DOI:10.1016/j.pss.2005.06.009