45 research outputs found

    Regression analysis with missing data and unknown colored noise: application to the MICROSCOPE space mission

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    The analysis of physical measurements often copes with highly correlated noises and interruptions caused by outliers, saturation events or transmission losses. We assess the impact of missing data on the performance of linear regression analysis involving the fit of modeled or measured time series. We show that data gaps can significantly alter the precision of the regression parameter estimation in the presence of colored noise, due to the frequency leakage of the noise power. We present a regression method which cancels this effect and estimates the parameters of interest with a precision comparable to the complete data case, even if the noise power spectral density (PSD) is not known a priori. The method is based on an autoregressive (AR) fit of the noise, which allows us to build an approximate generalized least squares estimator approaching the minimal variance bound. The method, which can be applied to any similar data processing, is tested on simulated measurements of the MICROSCOPE space mission, whose goal is to test the Weak Equivalence Principle (WEP) with a precision of 101510^{-15}. In this particular context the signal of interest is the WEP violation signal expected to be found around a well defined frequency. We test our method with different gap patterns and noise of known PSD and find that the results agree with the mission requirements, decreasing the uncertainty by a factor 60 with respect to ordinary least squares methods. We show that it also provides a test of significance to assess the uncertainty of the measurement.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Solar radiation pressure effects on very high-eccentric formation flying

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    A real alternative to Lagrange point very low perturbed orbits, for universe observation missions, is high eccentric Earth orbits. Combination of high eccentricity and very large semi-major axis leads to orbits with an important part of flight time far from Earth and its perturbations. Modeling this particular relative motion is the scoop of this paper. Main perturbation in HEO orbits are solar radiation pressure (SRP) and lunisolar effects, but formations are mainly affected by SRP effects. The modellization of its effects is done in two ways. First we introduce the SRP effects in the equations of the relative acceleration. Second, we obtain explicit analytical expressions of the temporal evolution of the relative motion. Resulting expressions enable very fast computations. These models are used to study HEO missions. We focus on two different problems: estimation of thrust for station keeping and evaluation of collision risk. We also consider the influence of the difference of ratio surface/mass between satellites

    Pioneer 10 data analysis: Investigation on periodic anomalies

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    International audienceThe Pioneer Anomaly refers to the difference between the expected theoretical tra jectory of the Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecrafts and the observed tra jectory through Doppler measurements. It has been interpreted by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) as a constant anomalous acceleration (Anderson et al. 2002). For this analysis, the Groupe Anomalie Pioneer (GAP) composed of several french laboratories has developped a specific tra jectography software, ODYSSEY, which enables to test different anomaly models. The paper will present, after a brief description of the software and the implemented models, the last results obtained: in addition to the constant anomaly, time dependent signatures of the anomaly have been noticed which can be described geometrically. The fit of the Pioneer 10 data with these new models yields a reduction of the standard deviation of the residual by a factor 2 with respect to the simple constant anomaly

    Pioneer 10 Doppler data analysis: disentangling periodic and secular anomalies

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    This paper reports the results of an analysis of the Doppler tracking data of Pioneer probes which did show an anomalous behaviour. A software has been developed for the sake of performing a data analysis as independent as possible from that of J. Anderson et al. \citep{anderson}, using the same data set. A first output of this new analysis is a confirmation of the existence of a secular anomaly with an amplitude about 0.8 nms2^{-2} compatible with that reported by Anderson et al. A second output is the study of periodic variations of the anomaly, which we characterize as functions of the azimuthal angle φ\varphi defined by the directions Sun-Earth Antenna and Sun-Pioneer. An improved fit is obtained with periodic variations written as the sum of a secular acceleration and two sinusoids of the angles φ\varphi and 2φ2\varphi. The tests which have been performed for assessing the robustness of these results are presented.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, minor amendment

    LAGEOS-type Satellites in Critical Supplementary Orbit Configuration and the Lense-Thirring Effect Detection

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    In this paper we analyze quantitatively the concept of LAGEOS--type satellites in critical supplementary orbit configuration (CSOC) which has proven capable of yielding various observables for many tests of General Relativity in the terrestrial gravitational field, with particular emphasis on the measurement of the Lense--Thirring effect.Comment: LaTex2e, 20 pages, 7 Tables, 6 Figures. Changes in Introduction, Conclusions, reference added, accepted for publication in Classical and Quantum Gravit

    A resonant-term-based model including a nascent disk, precession, and oblateness: application to GJ 876

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    Investigations of two resonant planets orbiting a star or two resonant satellites orbiting a planet often rely on a few resonant and secular terms in order to obtain a representative quantitative description of the system's dynamical evolution. We present a semianalytic model which traces the orbital evolution of any two resonant bodies in a first- through fourth-order eccentricity or inclination-based resonance dominated by the resonant and secular arguments of the user's choosing. By considering the variation of libration width with different orbital parameters, we identify regions of phase space which give rise to different resonant ''depths,'' and propose methods to model libration profiles. We apply the model to the GJ 876 extrasolar planetary system, quantify the relative importance of the relevant resonant and secular contributions, and thereby assess the goodness of the common approximation of representing the system by just the presumably dominant terms. We highlight the danger in using ''order'' as the metric for accuracy in the orbital solution by revealing the unnatural libration centers produced by the second-order, but not first-order, solution, and by demonstrating that the true orbital solution lies somewhere ''in-between'' the third- and fourth-order solutions. We also present formulas used to incorporate perturbations from central-body oblateness and precession, and a protoplanetary or protosatellite thin disk with gaps, into a resonant system. We quantify these contributions to the GJ 876 system, and thereby highlight the conditions which must exist for multi-planet exosystems to be significantly influenced by such factors. We find that massive enough disks may convert resonant libration into circulation; such disk-induced signatures may provide constraints for future studies of exoplanet systems.Comment: 39 pages of body text, 21 figures, 5 tables, 1 appendix, accepted for publication in Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronom

    Utilisation du développement de kaula dans une théorie par transformations canoniques

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    Two algorithms to compute Hansen-like coefficients with respect to the eccentric anomaly

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    International audienceConsidering a point of polar coordinates (r,ν) on an elliptic orbit of semi-major axis a, we set up and compare two algorithms based on recurrence relations to compute the Hansen-like coefficients View the MathML source, which are the coefficients of the expansion of (r/a)nexpimν in Fourier series of the eccentric anomaly. Both Hansen-like coefficients and their derivatives with respect to the eccentricity are considered, with a special focus on the case 0⩽|m|⩽n arising in the expression of the gravity potential due to a body external to the elliptic orbit. We provide two efficient algorithms to compute a table of coefficients with a simple recursive process. One algorithm uses some recurrence relations linking directly to the View the MathML source whereas the other algorithm involves the generalized Laplace coefficients View the MathML source (Laskar, 2005). Numerical behavior of the algorithms is investigated for low and high eccentricities. Both algorithms provide a relative accuracy better than 10-14 for n⩽30. Also, they are at least 10 time faster than an algorithm based on the FFT method (Klioner et al., 1997)

    Invariant Relative Orbits Taking into Account Third-Body Perturbation,

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    International audienceFor a satellite in an orbit of more than 1600 km in altitude, the effects of Sun and Moon on the orbit can't be negligible. Working with mean orbital elements, the secular drift of the longitude of the ascending node and the sum of the argu-ment of perigee and mean anomaly are set equal between two neighboring orbits to negate the separation over time due to the potential of the Earth and the third body effect. The expressions for the second order conditions that guaran-tee that the drift rates of two neighboring orbits are equal on the average are derived. To this end, the Hamiltonian was developed. The expressions for the non-vanishing time rate of change of canonical elements are obtained
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