卡西尼号天体测量观测的十年:过去的结果和未来的展望

Dayton L. Jones, J. Romney, V. Dhawan, W. Folkner, R. Jacobson, C. Jacobs, E. Fomalont
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引用次数: 3

摘要

卡西尼号宇宙飞船自2004年以来一直在土星轨道上运行。在此期间,利用甚长基线阵列(VLBA)对卡西尼号的天空位置进行了定期的天文测量。这些是高精度的差分测量,可以确定卡西尼号相对于河外射电源的位置。微分窄角天体测量减少了许多误差来源,特别是那些与电离层和对流层中的信号传播效应有关的误差来源。背景射电源位置由其他国际VLBI观测与惯性国际天体参考系(ICRF)联系在一起。因此,我们获得了一系列卡西尼号的ICRF位置,这些位置可以与深空网络多普勒跟踪的航天器轨道解相结合,得到土星系统质心的ICRF位置。这些位置具有典型的纳米弧度级精度。在某些时期,背景源位置的不确定性是总误差的主要组成部分,但随着额外的VLBI观测被纳入射电源目录,这些位置正在不断得到改善。喷气推进实验室的行星星历组使用我们的位置测量来适应改进的土星轨道解决方案。结果,土星轨道平面的方向现在已知约为0.25毫角秒(1.25 nrad),几乎比vlba之前的不确定性提高了一个数量级。我们将继续这个观测项目,直到2017年底卡西尼号任务结束。到那时,我们将覆盖土星轨道经度范围的三分之一。这项技术的未来改进将包括使用更高的航天器下行频率(Ka波段代替X波段)和更高的地面阵列灵敏度,以允许使用较弱但角度较近的参考源。此外,正在进行的提高射电源目录准确性的国际运动将扩大到较弱的射电源,改善它们与ICRF的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A decade of astrometric observations of Cassini: Past results and future prospects
The Cassini spacecraft has been in orbit about Saturn since 2004. During this time, regular astrometric measurements of Cassini's sky position have been made with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA). These are high precision differential measurements that determine the position of Cassini with respect to angularly nearby extragalactic radio sources. Differential, narrow-angle astrometry reduces many error sources, particularly those associated with signal propagation effects in the ionosphere and troposphere. The background radio sources positions are tied to the inertial International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) by other international VLBI observations. Thus, we obtain a series of ICRF positions for Cassini, which can be combined with spacecraft orbit solutions from Deep Space Network Doppler tracking to get ICRF positions for the center of mass of the Saturn system. These positions have typical accuracies at the nano-radian level. For some epochs uncertainties in the background source positions are a major component of the total error, but these positions are being constantly improved as additional VLBI observations are incorporated into radio source catalogs. The planetary ephemeris group at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory uses our position measurements to fit improved orbital solutions for Saturn. As a result the orientation of the plane of Saturn's orbit is now known to approximately 0.25 milli-arcseconds (1.25 nrad), nearly an order of magnitude improvement over its pre-VLBA uncertainty. We will continue this observing program until the end of the Cassini mission in late 2017. By that time we will have covered about 1/3 of Saturn's orbital longitude range. Future improvements to this technique will include the use of higher spacecraft downlink frequencies (Ka band instead of X band) and higher ground array sensitivity to permit the use of weaker but angularly closer reference sources. In addition, the continuing international campaigns to enhance the accuracy of radio source catalogs will be extended to weaker sources, improving their ties to the ICRF.
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