Metop-GRAS in-orbit instrument performance
Journal article, 2010

The GRAS instrument on the Metop-A satellite provides more than 600 radio occultation measurement profiles per day. The instrument is characterized by its wide antenna coverage, high signal-to-noise ratio and an ultra-stable clock reference. The conventional dual-frequency tracking of GPS signals is under dynamic atmosphere conditions complemented by open loop tracking with sampling of the signal at a 1 kHz rate, providing an unprecedented view of the signal spectral environment. This paper presents the instrument performance as derived from analysis of in-orbit measurement data. We show that the noise figure is low enough to enable mapping of external radio noise variations over the earth's surface. An error propagation model is presented to relate instrument characteristics to bending angle performance. This model is also used to illustrate the relation between filter bandwidth, resolution and measurement noise. The Doppler model, guiding open loop measurements, is found to be accurate to better than 20 Hz with a possibility for improvement to 10 Hz. The high performance at low altitudes enables the presence of surface reflections at the -20-dB level to be identified in more than 50% of the occultations. The potential performance improvements for next generation receivers are discussed.

Author

M. Bonnedal

Ruag Space AB

J. Christensen

Ruag Space AB

A. Carlstrom

Ruag Space AB

Anders Berg

Chalmers, Department of Radio and Space Science, Radar Remote Sensing

GPS Solutions

1080-5370 (ISSN) 15211886 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 1 109-120

Subject Categories

Physical Sciences

DOI

10.1007/s10291-009-0142-3

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Latest update

5/4/2018 1