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Marshall et al. 1995
Marshall, J.A., Zelensky, N.R., Klosko, S.M., Chinn, D.S., Luthcke, S.B., Rachlin, K.E. and Williamson, R.G. (1995). The temporal and spatial characteristics of TOPEX/POSEIDON radial orbit error. Journal of Geophysical Research 100: doi: 10.1029/95JC01845. issn: 0148-0227.

Satellite orbit error has long been the bane of oceanographers who analyze altimetry data. However, radial orbit error on TOPEX/POSEIDON (T/P) has been reduced to the 3 to 4-cm root-mean-square (rms) level over a 10-day repeat cycle, which represents an order of magnitude improvement over earlier altimetry missions such as Geosat. Consequently, oceanographers are now able to directly evaluate the absolute ocean topography to unprecedented accuracy levels. While significantly reduced, the T/P orbit error still requires quantification. This study examines the spatial and temporal characteristics of the T/P radial orbit error, as assessed through the analysis of laser tracking residuals and orbit comparisons with independently generated trajectories. Spectral analyses of the orbit differences between the orbits determined from satellite laser ranging and Doppler Orbitography and Radiopositioning Integrated by Satellite data and the independently determined reduced dynamic Global Positioning System (GPS) ephemerides indicate that the predominant power is at the once-per-orbital revolution frequency with 2- to 3-cm peaks. When the orbit differences are colinearly aligned to a fixed geographic grid and spectral analysis is performed at each geographic grid point, a nearly 60-day period is found with maximum amplitudes in the 2- to 4-cm range.

The contribution of both conservative and nonconservative force and measurement mismodeling to this error signal are assessed. We demonstrate that the ~60-day error period seen at fixed geographic locations arises from weaknesses in the dynamic ocean tidal models used in the orbit calculations. New tidal models have been developed which significantly reduce this error. Second-generation orbits incorporating many model improvements have been computed and demonstrate a significant reduction in the radial orbit error signals. Some orbit error still exists, and methods for further model improvements and the possibility of achieving 1-cm radial rms orbit accuracy in T/P are discussed. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1995

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Abstract

Keywords
Geodesy and Gravity, Instruments and techniques, Oceanography, General, Instruments and techniques
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
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American Geophysical Union
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