6,928 research outputs found
Innovative observing strategy and orbit determination for Low Earth Orbit Space Debris
We present the results of a large scale simulation, reproducing the behavior
of a data center for the build-up and maintenance of a complete catalog of
space debris in the upper part of the low Earth orbits region (LEO). The
purpose is to determine the performances of a network of advanced optical
sensors, through the use of the newest orbit determination algorithms developed
by the Department of Mathematics of Pisa (DM). Such a network has been proposed
to ESA in the Space Situational Awareness (SSA) framework by Carlo Gavazzi
Space SpA (CGS), Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica (INAF), DM, and Istituto di
Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione (ISTI-CNR). The conclusion is that it is
possible to use a network of optical sensors to build up a catalog containing
more than 98% of the objects with perigee height between 1100 and 2000 km,
which would be observable by a reference radar system selected as comparison.
It is also possible to maintain such a catalog within the accuracy requirements
motivated by collision avoidance, and to detect catastrophic fragmentation
events. However, such results depend upon specific assumptions on the sensor
and on the software technologies
Orbit Determination with the two-body Integrals
We investigate a method to compute a finite set of preliminary orbits for
solar system bodies using the first integrals of the Kepler problem. This
method is thought for the applications to the modern sets of astrometric
observations, where often the information contained in the observations allows
only to compute, by interpolation, two angular positions of the observed body
and their time derivatives at a given epoch; we call this set of data
attributable. Given two attributables of the same body at two different epochs
we can use the energy and angular momentum integrals of the two-body problem to
write a system of polynomial equations for the topocentric distance and the
radial velocity at the two epochs. We define two different algorithms for the
computation of the solutions, based on different ways to perform elimination of
variables and obtain a univariate polynomial. Moreover we use the redundancy of
the data to test the hypothesis that two attributables belong to the same body
(linkage problem). It is also possible to compute a covariance matrix,
describing the uncertainty of the preliminary orbits which results from the
observation error statistics. The performance of this method has been
investigated by using a large set of simulated observations of the Pan-STARRS
project.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figur
Orbit determination of space objects based on sparse optical data
While building up a catalog of Earth orbiting objects, if the available
optical observations are sparse, not deliberate follow ups of specific objects,
no orbit determination is possible without previous correlation of observations
obtained at different times. This correlation step is the most computationally
intensive, and becomes more and more difficult as the number of objects to be
discovered increases. In this paper we tested two different algorithms (and the
related prototype software) recently developed to solve the correlation problem
for objects in geostationary orbit (GEO), including the accurate orbit
determination by full least squares solutions with all six orbital elements.
Because of the presence in the GEO region of a significant subpopulation of
high area to mass objects, strongly affected by non-gravitational
perturbations, it was actually necessary to solve also for dynamical parameters
describing these effects, that is to fit between 6 and 8 free parameters for
each orbit. The validation was based upon a set of real data, acquired from the
ESA Space Debris Telescope (ESASDT) at the Teide observatory (Canary Islands).
We proved that it is possible to assemble a set of sparse observations into a
set of objects with orbits, starting from a sparse time distribution of
observations, which would be compatible with a survey capable of covering the
region of interest in the sky just once per night. This could result in a
significant reduction of the requirements for a future telescope network, with
respect to what would have been required with the previously known algorithm
for correlation and orbit determination.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Multiple solutions for asteroid orbits: Computational procedure and applications
We describe the Multiple Solutions Method, a one-dimensional sampling of the six-dimensional orbital confidence region that is widely applicable in the field of asteroid orbit determination. In many situations there is one predominant direction of uncertainty in an orbit determination or orbital prediction, i.e., a ``weak'' direction. The idea is to record Multiple Solutions by following this, typically curved, weak direction, or Line Of Variations (LOV). In this paper we describe the method and give new insights into the mathematics behind this tool. We pay particular attention to the problem of how to ensure that the coordinate systems are properly scaled so that the weak direction really reflects the intrinsic direction of greatest uncertainty. We also describe how the multiple solutions can be used even in the absence of a nominal orbit solution, which substantially broadens the realm of applications. There are numerous applications for multiple solutions; we discuss a few problems in asteroid orbit determination and prediction where we have had good success with the method. In particular, we show that multiple solutions can be used effectively for potential impact monitoring, preliminary orbit determination, asteroid identification, and for the recovery of lost asteroids
A Faster Counting Protocol for Anonymous Dynamic Networks
We study the problem of counting the number of nodes in a slotted-time
communication network, under the challenging assumption that nodes do not have
identifiers and the network topology changes frequently. That is, for each time
slot links among nodes can change arbitrarily provided that the network is
always connected. Tolerating dynamic topologies is crucial in face of mobility
and unreliable communication whereas, even if identifiers are available, it
might be convenient to ignore them in massive networks with changing topology.
Counting is a fundamental task in distributed computing since knowing the size
of the system often facilitates the design of solutions for more complex
problems. Currently, the best upper bound proved on the running time to compute
the exact network size is double-exponential. However, only linear complexity
lower bounds are known, leaving open the question of whether efficient Counting
protocols for Anonymous Dynamic Networks exist or not. In this paper we make a
significant step towards answering this question by presenting a distributed
Counting protocol for Anonymous Dynamic Networks which has exponential time
complexity. Our algorithm ensures that eventually every node knows the exact
size of the system and stops executing the algorithm. Previous Counting
protocols have either double-exponential time complexity, or they are
exponential but do not terminate, or terminate but do not provide running-time
guarantees, or guarantee only an exponential upper bound on the network size.
Other protocols are heuristic and do not guarantee the correct count
Innovative methods of correlation and orbit determination for space debris
We propose two algorithms to provide a full preliminary orbit of an
Earth-orbiting object with a number of observations lower than the classical
methods, such as those by Laplace and Gauss. The first one is the Virtual
debris algorithm, based upon the admissible region, that is the set of the
unknown quantities corresponding to possible orbits for objects in Earth orbit
(as opposed to both interplanetary orbits and ballistic ones). A similar method
has already been successfully used in recent years for the asteroidal case. The
second algorithm uses the integrals of the geocentric 2-body motion, which must
have the same values at the times of the different observations for a common
orbit to exist. We also discuss how to account for the perturbations of the
2-body motion, e.g., the effect.Comment: 18 page
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