Orbit Determination and Time Transfer for a Lunar Radio Navigation System
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Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2023-02-26
Type of Work
Department
Program
Citation of Original Publication
Sesta,Andrea, et al. "Orbit Determination and Time Transfer for a Lunar Radio Navigation System" EGU General Assembly 2023, EGU23-15933 (Vienna, Austria & Online, 23–28 April 2023). https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-15933.
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Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Subjects
Abstract
Within the pre-phase A of the Moonlight project proposed and funded by the European Space
Agency (ESA), the ATLAS consortium has proposed an architecture to support a Lunar Radio
Navigation System (LRNS) capable of providing PNT (Positioning, Navigation, and Timing) services
to various lunar users. The Moonlight LRNS will be a powerful tool in support of the lunar
exploration endeavors, both human and robotic.
The ESA LRNS will consist of a small constellation of 3-4 satellites put in Elliptical Lunar Frozen
Orbits (ELFO) with the aposelene above the southern hemisphere to better cover this region, given
its interest for future lunar missions. This LRNS will be supported by a ground station network of
small dish antennas (~30 cm), which can establish Multiple Spacecraft Per Aperture (MSPA)
tracking at K-band. Any Earth station will be capable of sending a single uplink signal to multiple
spacecraft thanks to Code Division Multiplexing modulation, while in the downlink multiple
carriers can share the same K-band bandwidth by implementing Code Division Multiple Access
(CDMA) on the onboard transponders. This allows the implementation of the Same Beam
Interferometry (SBI) technique [1], which adds to spread spectrum ranging and Doppler
measurements. In the scope of disseminating accurate PNT services to end users, the
constellation will also be capable of maintaining a synchronization to the Earth station clocks to
the ns level.
The performances of the proposed architecture have been validated through numerical
simulations performed with the ESA GODOT software, enhanced with additional user-defined
features and capabilities. For each satellite of the LRNS constellation, the attainable orbital
accuracy is at level of a few meters for most orbit mean anomalies and it has been computed
considering a setup which includes a perturbed dynamical model (mainly coming from
uncertainties in the accelerations induced by the solar radiation pressure and orbital maneuvers)
and a realistic error model for Doppler, ranging and SBI measurements.