Recent advances with space navigation technologies developed by NASA in space-based atomic clocks and pulsar X-ray navigation, combined with past successes in autonomous navigation using optical imaging, brings to the forefront the need to compare space navigation using optical, radiometric, and pulsar-based measurements using a common set of assumptions and techniques. This review article examines these navigation data types in two different ways. First, a simplified deep space orbit determination problem is posed that captures key features of the dynamics and geometry, and then each data type is characterized for its ability to solve for the orbit. The data types are compared and contrasted using a semi-analytical approach with geometric dilution of precision techniques. The results provide useful parametric insights into the strengths of each data type. In the second part of the paper, a high-fidelity, Monte Carlo simulation of a Mars cruise, approach, and entry navigation problem is studied. The results found complement the semi-analytic results in the first part, and illustrate specific issues such as each data type’s quantitative impact on solution accuracy and their ability to support autonomous delivery to a planet.
CITATION STYLE
Ely, T., Bhaskaran, S., Bradley, N., Lazio, T. J. W., & Martin-Mur, T. (2022). Comparison of Deep Space Navigation Using Optical Imaging, Pulsar Time-of-Arrival Tracking, and/or Radiometric Tracking. Journal of the Astronautical Sciences, 69(2), 385–472. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40295-021-00290-z
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.