7 research outputs found

    Simulation of multiangular remote sensing products using small satellite formations

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    To completely capture the multiangular reflectance of an opaque surface, one must estimate the bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF), which seeks to represent variations in surface reflectance as a function of measurement and illumination angles at any time instant. The gap in angular sampling abilities of existing single satellites in Earth observation missions can be complemented by small satellites in formation flight. The formation would have intercalibrated spectrometer payloads making reflectance measurements, at many zenith and azimuthal angles simultaneously. We use a systems engineering tool coupled with a science evaluation tool to demonstrate the performance impact and mission feasibility. Formation designs are generated and compared to each other and multisensor single spacecraft, in terms of estimation error of BRDF and its dependent products such as albedo, light use efficiency (LUE), and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI). Performance is benchmarked with respect to data from previous airborne campaigns (NASA's Cloud Absorption Radiometer), and tower measurements (AMSPEC II), and assuming known BRDF models. Simulations show that a formation of six small satellites produces lesser average error (21.82%) than larger single spacecraft (23.2%), purely in terms of angular sampling benefits. The average monolithic albedo error of 3.6% is outperformed by a formation of three satellites (1.86%), when arranged optimally and by a formation of seven to eight satellites when arranged in any way. An eight-satellite formation reduces albedo errors to 0.67% and LUE errors from 89.77% (monolithic) to 78.69%. The average NDVI for an eight satellite, nominally maintained formation is better than the monolithic 0.038

    Simulation of Multiangular Remote Sensing Products Using Small Satellite Formations

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    Architectural optimization framework for earth-observing heterogeneous constellations : marine weather forecast case

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    Earth observation satellite programs are currently facing, for some applications, the need to deliver hourly revisit times, subkilometric spatial resolutions, and near-real-time data access times. These stringent requirements, combined with the consolidation of small-satellite platforms and novel distributed architecture approaches, are stressing the need to study the design of new, heterogeneous, and heavily networked satellite systems that can potentially replace or complement traditional space assets. In this context, this paper presents partial results from ONION, a research project devoted to studying distributed satellite systems and their architecting characteristics. A design-oriented framework that allows selecting optimal architectures for the given user needs is presented in this paper. The framework has been used in the study of a strategic use-case and its results are hereby presented. From an initial design space of 5586 potential architectures, the framework has been able to preselect 28 candidate designs by an exhaustive analysis of their performance and by quantifying their quality attributes. This very exploration of architectures and the characteristics of the solution space are presented in this paper along with the selected solution and the results of a detailed performance analysis.Postprint (author's final draft

    Developing an Aircraft-Based Angular Distribution Model of Solar Reflection from Wildfire Smoke to Aid Satellite-Based Radiative Flux Estimation

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    This study examines the angular distribution of scattered solar radiation associated with wildfire smoke aerosols observed over boreal forests in Canada during the ARCTAS (Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites) campaign. First, it estimates smoke radiative parameters (550 nm optical depth of 3.9 and single scattering albedo of 0.90) using quasi-simultaneous multiangular and multispectral airborne measurements by the Cloud Absorption Radiometer (CAR). Next, the paper estimates the broadband top-of-atmosphere radiances that a satellite instrument such as the Clouds and the Earths Radiant Energy System (CERES) could have observed, given the narrowband CAR measurements made from an aircraft circling about a kilometer above the smoke layer. This estimation includes both an atmospheric correction that accounts for the atmosphere above the aircraft and a narrowband-to-broadband conversion. The angular distribution of estimated radiances is found to be substantially different than the angular model used in the operational data processing of CERES observations over the same area. This is because the CERES model is a monthly average model that was constructed using observations taken under smoke-free conditions. Finally, a sensitivity analysis shows that the estimated angular distribution remains accurate for a fairly wide range of smoke and underlying surface parameters. Overall, results from this work suggest that airborne CAR measurements can bring some substantial improvements in the accuracy of satellite-based radiative flux estimates

    Atmospheric Research 2016 Technical Highlights

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    Atmospheric research in the Earth Sciences Division (610) consists of research and technology development programs dedicated to advancing knowledge and understanding of the atmosphere and its interaction with the climate of Earth. The Divisions goals are to improve understanding of the dynamics and physical properties of precipitation, clouds, and aerosols; atmospheric chemistry, including the role of natural and anthropogenic trace species on the ozone balance in the stratosphere and the troposphere; and radiative properties of Earth's atmosphere and the influence of solar variability on the Earth's climate. Major research activities are carried out in the Mesoscale Atmospheric Processes Laboratory, the Climate and Radiation Laboratory, the Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Laboratory, and the Wallops Field Support Office. The overall scope of the research covers an end-to-end process, starting with the identification of scientific problems, leading to observation requirements for remote-sensing platforms, technology and retrieval algorithm development; followed by flight projects and satellite missions; and eventually, resulting in data processing, analyses of measurements, and dissemination from flight projects and missions. Instrument scientists conceive, design, develop, and implement ultraviolet, infrared, optical, radar, laser, and lidar technology to remotely sense the atmosphere. Members of the various laboratories conduct field measurements for satellite sensor calibration and data validation, and carry out numerous modeling activities. These modeling activities include climate model simulations, modeling the chemistry and transport of trace species on regional-to-global scales, cloud resolving models, and developing the next-generation Earth system models. Satellite missions, field campaigns, peer-reviewed publications, and successful proposals are essential at every stage of the research process to meeting our goals and maintaining leadership of the Earth Sciences Division in atmospheric science research. Figure 1.1 shows the 22-year record of peer-reviewed publications and proposals among the various laboratories

    In pursuit of autonomous distributed satellite systems

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    Satellite imagery has become an essential resource for environmental, humanitarian, and industrial endeavours. As a means to satisfy the requirements of new applications and user needs, novel Earth Observation (EO) systems are exploring the suitability of Distributed Satellite Systems (DSS) in which multiple observation assets concurrently sense the Earth. Given the temporal and spatial resolution requirements of EO products, DSS are often envisioned as large-scale systems with multiple sensing capabilities operating in a networked manner. Enabled by the consolidation of small satellite platforms and fostered by the emerging capabilities of distributed systems, these new architectures pose multiple design and operational challenges. Two of them are the main pillars of this research, namely, the conception of decision-support tools to assist the architecting process of a DSS, and the design of autonomous operational frameworks based on decentralised, on-board decision-making. The first part of this dissertation addresses the architecting of heterogeneous, networked DSS architectures that hybridise small satellite platforms with traditional EO assets. We present a generic design-oriented optimisation framework based on tradespace exploration methodologies. The goals of this framework are twofold: to select the most optimal constellation design; and to facilitate the identification of design trends, unfeasible regions, and tensions among architectural attributes. Oftentimes in EO DSS, system requirements and stakeholder preferences are not only articulated through functional attributes (i.e. resolution, revisit time, etc.) or monetary constraints, but also through qualitative traits such as flexibility, evolvability, robustness, or resiliency, amongst others. In line with that, the architecting framework defines a single figure of merit that aggregates quantitative attributes and qualitative ones-the so-called ilities of a system. With that, designers can steer the design of DSS both in terms of performance or cost, and in terms of their high-level characteristics. The application of this optimisation framework has been illustrated in two timely use-cases identified in the context of the EU-funded ONION project: a system that measures ocean and ice parameters in Polar regions to facilitate weather forecast and off-shore operations; and a system that provides agricultural variables crucial for global management of water stress, crop state, and draughts. The analysis of architectural features facilitated a comprehensive understanding of the functional and operational characteristics of DSS. With that, this thesis continues to delve into the design of DSS by focusing on one particular functional trait: autonomy. The minimisation of human-operator intervention has been traditionally sought in other space systems and can be especially critical for large-scale, structurally dynamic, heterogeneous DSS. In DSS, autonomy is expected to cope with the likely inability to operate very large-scale systems in a centralised manner, to improve the science return, and to leverage many of their emerging capabilities (e.g. tolerance to failures, adaptability to changing structures and user needs, responsiveness). We propose an autonomous operational framework that provides decentralised decision-making capabilities to DSS by means of local reasoning and individual resource allocation, and satellite-to-satellite interactions. In contrast to previous works, the autonomous decision-making framework is evaluated in this dissertation for generic constellation designs the goal of which is to minimise global revisit times. As part of the characterisation of our solution, we stressed the implications that autonomous operations can have upon satellite platforms with stringent resource constraints (e.g. power, memory, communications capabilities) and evaluated the behaviour of the solution for a large-scale DSS composed of 117 CubeSat-like satellite units.La imatgeria per sat猫l路lit ha esdevingut un recurs essencial per assolir tasques ambientals, humanit脿ries o industrials. Per tal de satisfer els requeriments de les noves aplicacions i usuaris, els sistemes d鈥檕bservaci贸 de la Terra (OT) estan explorant la idone茂tat dels Sistemes de Sat猫l路lit Distribu茂ts (SSD), on m煤ltiples observatoris espacials mesuren el planeta simult脿niament. Degut al les resolucions temporals i espacials requerides, els SSD sovint es conceben com sistemes de gran escala que operen en xarxa. Aquestes noves arquitectures promouen les capacitats emergents dels sistemes distribu茂ts i, tot i que s贸n possibles gr脿cies a l鈥檃cceptaci贸 de les plataformes de sat猫l路lits petits, encara presenten molts reptes en quant al disseny i operacions. Dos d鈥檈lls s贸n els pilars principals d鈥檃questa tesi, en concret, la concepci贸 d鈥檈ines de suport a la presa de decisions pel disseny de SSD, i la definici贸 d鈥檕peracions aut貌nomes basades en gesti贸 descentralitzada a bord dels sat猫l路lits. La primera part d鈥檃questa dissertaci贸 es centra en el disseny arquitectural de SSD heterogenis i en xarxa, imbricant tecnologies de petits sat猫l路lits amb actius tradicionals. Es presenta un entorn d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 orientat al disseny basat en metodologies d鈥檈xploraci贸 i comparaci贸 de solucions. Els objectius d鈥檃quest entorn s贸n: la selecci贸 el disseny de constel路laci贸 m茅s 貌ptim; i facilitar la identificaci贸 de tend猫ncies de disseny, regions d鈥檌ncompatibilitat, i tensions entre atributs arquitecturals. Sovint en els SSD d鈥橭T, els requeriments del sistema i l鈥檈xpressi贸 de prioritats no nom茅s s鈥檃rticulen en quant als atributs funcionals o les restriccions monet脿ries, sin贸 tamb茅 a trav茅s de les caracter铆stiques qualitatives com la flexibilitat, l鈥檈volucionabilitat, la robustesa, o la resili猫ncia, entre d鈥檃ltres. En l铆nia amb aix貌, l鈥檈ntorn d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 defineix una 煤nica figura de m猫rit que agrega rendiment, cost i atributs qualitatius. Aix铆 l鈥檈quip de disseny pot influir en les solucions del proc茅s d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 tant en els aspectes quantitatius, com en les caracter铆stiques dalt nivell. L鈥檃plicaci贸 d鈥檃quest entorn d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 s鈥檌l路lustra en dos casos d鈥櫭簊 actuals identificats en context del projecte europeu ONION: un sistema que mesura par脿metres de l鈥檕ce脿 i gel als pols per millorar la predicci贸 meteorol貌gica i les operacions marines; i un sistema que obt茅 mesures agron貌miques vitals per la gesti贸 global de l鈥檃igua, l鈥檈stimaci贸 d鈥檈stat dels cultius, i la gesti贸 de sequeres. L鈥檃n脿lisi de propietats arquitecturals ha perm猫s copsar de manera exhaustiva les caracter铆stiques funcionals i operacionals d鈥檃quests sistemes. Amb aix貌, la tesi ha seguit aprofundint en el disseny de SSD centrant-se, particularment, en un tret funcional: l鈥檃utonomia. Minimitzar la intervenci贸 de l鈥檕perador hum脿 茅s com煤 en altres sistemes espacials i podria ser especialment cr铆tic pels SSD de gran escala, d鈥檈structura din脿mica i heterogenis. En els SSD s鈥檈spera que l鈥檃utonomia solucioni la possible incapacitat d鈥檕perar sistemes de gran escala de forma centralitzada, que millori el retorn cient铆fic i que n鈥檃puntali les seves propietats emergents (e.g. toler脿ncia a errors, adaptabilitat a canvis estructural i de necessitats d鈥檜suari, capacitat de resposta). Es proposa un sistema d鈥檕peracions aut貌nomes que atorga la capacitat de gestionar els sistemes de forma descentralitzada, a trav茅s del raonament local, l鈥檃ssignaci贸 individual de recursos, i les interaccions sat猫l路lit-a-sat猫l路lit. Al contrari que treballs anteriors, la presa de decisions aut貌noma s鈥檃valua per constel路lacions que tenen com a objectius de missi贸 la minimitzaci贸 del temps de revisita global

    In pursuit of autonomous distributed satellite systems

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    A la p脿gina 265 diu: "In an effort to facilitate the reproduction of results, both the source code of the simulation environment and the configuration files that were prepared for the design characterisation are available in an open repository: https://github.com/carlesaraguz/aeossSatellite imagery has become an essential resource for environmental, humanitarian, and industrial endeavours. As a means to satisfy the requirements of new applications and user needs, novel Earth Observation (EO) systems are exploring the suitability of Distributed Satellite Systems (DSS) in which multiple observation assets concurrently sense the Earth. Given the temporal and spatial resolution requirements of EO products, DSS are often envisioned as large-scale systems with multiple sensing capabilities operating in a networked manner. Enabled by the consolidation of small satellite platforms and fostered by the emerging capabilities of distributed systems, these new architectures pose multiple design and operational challenges. Two of them are the main pillars of this research, namely, the conception of decision-support tools to assist the architecting process of a DSS, and the design of autonomous operational frameworks based on decentralised, on-board decision-making. The first part of this dissertation addresses the architecting of heterogeneous, networked DSS architectures that hybridise small satellite platforms with traditional EO assets. We present a generic design-oriented optimisation framework based on tradespace exploration methodologies. The goals of this framework are twofold: to select the most optimal constellation design; and to facilitate the identification of design trends, unfeasible regions, and tensions among architectural attributes. Oftentimes in EO DSS, system requirements and stakeholder preferences are not only articulated through functional attributes (i.e. resolution, revisit time, etc.) or monetary constraints, but also through qualitative traits such as flexibility, evolvability, robustness, or resiliency, amongst others. In line with that, the architecting framework defines a single figure of merit that aggregates quantitative attributes and qualitative ones-the so-called ilities of a system. With that, designers can steer the design of DSS both in terms of performance or cost, and in terms of their high-level characteristics. The application of this optimisation framework has been illustrated in two timely use-cases identified in the context of the EU-funded ONION project: a system that measures ocean and ice parameters in Polar regions to facilitate weather forecast and off-shore operations; and a system that provides agricultural variables crucial for global management of water stress, crop state, and draughts. The analysis of architectural features facilitated a comprehensive understanding of the functional and operational characteristics of DSS. With that, this thesis continues to delve into the design of DSS by focusing on one particular functional trait: autonomy. The minimisation of human-operator intervention has been traditionally sought in other space systems and can be especially critical for large-scale, structurally dynamic, heterogeneous DSS. In DSS, autonomy is expected to cope with the likely inability to operate very large-scale systems in a centralised manner, to improve the science return, and to leverage many of their emerging capabilities (e.g. tolerance to failures, adaptability to changing structures and user needs, responsiveness). We propose an autonomous operational framework that provides decentralised decision-making capabilities to DSS by means of local reasoning and individual resource allocation, and satellite-to-satellite interactions. In contrast to previous works, the autonomous decision-making framework is evaluated in this dissertation for generic constellation designs the goal of which is to minimise global revisit times. As part of the characterisation of our solution, we stressed the implications that autonomous operations can have upon satellite platforms with stringent resource constraints (e.g. power, memory, communications capabilities) and evaluated the behaviour of the solution for a large-scale DSS composed of 117 CubeSat-like satellite units.La imatgeria per sat猫l路lit ha esdevingut un recurs essencial per assolir tasques ambientals, humanit脿ries o industrials. Per tal de satisfer els requeriments de les noves aplicacions i usuaris, els sistemes d鈥檕bservaci贸 de la Terra (OT) estan explorant la idone茂tat dels Sistemes de Sat猫l路lit Distribu茂ts (SSD), on m煤ltiples observatoris espacials mesuren el planeta simult脿niament. Degut al les resolucions temporals i espacials requerides, els SSD sovint es conceben com sistemes de gran escala que operen en xarxa. Aquestes noves arquitectures promouen les capacitats emergents dels sistemes distribu茂ts i, tot i que s贸n possibles gr脿cies a l鈥檃cceptaci贸 de les plataformes de sat猫l路lits petits, encara presenten molts reptes en quant al disseny i operacions. Dos d鈥檈lls s贸n els pilars principals d鈥檃questa tesi, en concret, la concepci贸 d鈥檈ines de suport a la presa de decisions pel disseny de SSD, i la definici贸 d鈥檕peracions aut貌nomes basades en gesti贸 descentralitzada a bord dels sat猫l路lits. La primera part d鈥檃questa dissertaci贸 es centra en el disseny arquitectural de SSD heterogenis i en xarxa, imbricant tecnologies de petits sat猫l路lits amb actius tradicionals. Es presenta un entorn d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 orientat al disseny basat en metodologies d鈥檈xploraci贸 i comparaci贸 de solucions. Els objectius d鈥檃quest entorn s贸n: la selecci贸 el disseny de constel路laci贸 m茅s 貌ptim; i facilitar la identificaci贸 de tend猫ncies de disseny, regions d鈥檌ncompatibilitat, i tensions entre atributs arquitecturals. Sovint en els SSD d鈥橭T, els requeriments del sistema i l鈥檈xpressi贸 de prioritats no nom茅s s鈥檃rticulen en quant als atributs funcionals o les restriccions monet脿ries, sin贸 tamb茅 a trav茅s de les caracter铆stiques qualitatives com la flexibilitat, l鈥檈volucionabilitat, la robustesa, o la resili猫ncia, entre d鈥檃ltres. En l铆nia amb aix貌, l鈥檈ntorn d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 defineix una 煤nica figura de m猫rit que agrega rendiment, cost i atributs qualitatius. Aix铆 l鈥檈quip de disseny pot influir en les solucions del proc茅s d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 tant en els aspectes quantitatius, com en les caracter铆stiques dalt nivell. L鈥檃plicaci贸 d鈥檃quest entorn d鈥檕ptimitzaci贸 s鈥檌l路lustra en dos casos d鈥櫭簊 actuals identificats en context del projecte europeu ONION: un sistema que mesura par脿metres de l鈥檕ce脿 i gel als pols per millorar la predicci贸 meteorol貌gica i les operacions marines; i un sistema que obt茅 mesures agron貌miques vitals per la gesti贸 global de l鈥檃igua, l鈥檈stimaci贸 d鈥檈stat dels cultius, i la gesti贸 de sequeres. L鈥檃n脿lisi de propietats arquitecturals ha perm猫s copsar de manera exhaustiva les caracter铆stiques funcionals i operacionals d鈥檃quests sistemes. Amb aix貌, la tesi ha seguit aprofundint en el disseny de SSD centrant-se, particularment, en un tret funcional: l鈥檃utonomia. Minimitzar la intervenci贸 de l鈥檕perador hum脿 茅s com煤 en altres sistemes espacials i podria ser especialment cr铆tic pels SSD de gran escala, d鈥檈structura din脿mica i heterogenis. En els SSD s鈥檈spera que l鈥檃utonomia solucioni la possible incapacitat d鈥檕perar sistemes de gran escala de forma centralitzada, que millori el retorn cient铆fic i que n鈥檃puntali les seves propietats emergents (e.g. toler脿ncia a errors, adaptabilitat a canvis estructural i de necessitats d鈥檜suari, capacitat de resposta). Es proposa un sistema d鈥檕peracions aut貌nomes que atorga la capacitat de gestionar els sistemes de forma descentralitzada, a trav茅s del raonament local, l鈥檃ssignaci贸 individual de recursos, i les interaccions sat猫l路lit-a-sat猫l路lit. Al contrari que treballs anteriors, la presa de decisions aut貌noma s鈥檃valua per constel路lacions que tenen com a objectius de missi贸 la minimitzaci贸 del temps de revisita global.Postprint (published version
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