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SLR-Mail No.57

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Date:1997-05-03 00:00:00
Sender:Bill Purdy, NRL TiPS Program Manager <DSGJEH@cdslr3.atsc.allied.com>
Subject:[SLR-Mail] No. 57: TiPS SLR Tracking
Author:Bill Purdy, NRL TiPS Program Manager
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SLR Electronic Mail 1997-05-03 00:00:00 UTC Message No. 57
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Author:Bill Purdy, NRL TiPS Program Manager
Subject: TiPS SLR Tracking

Author:Bill Purdy, NRL TiPS Program Manager

To the TiPS Tracking Community:

As we end April, the Naval Research Lab would like to
express our appreciation to the SLR community for their
diligence and initiative in tracking the TiPS tethered
satellite. Your efforts are greatly appreciated especially
in light of the difficulty in tracking this system. Due to
the great volume of data in the last month, we have been able
to obtain a proper estimate of the satelliteÕs drag
properties. Gratefully, this has enabled us to generate our
first orbit predict with a stable time bias.

Previously, the tether dynamics and shortage of data had
complicated the orbit determination problem enough to induce
in our predicts an unstable drift which made tracking
problematic even with terminator assist. The gaps in our
observation data made calibration of our drag model very
difficult. The tether motion increased the complexity of the
problem because it caused the tether´s effective surface area
to vary. By combining an outstanding period of SLR tracking
with a generous supply of radar data from the Kwajalein
Atoll, we now have a very good estimate for the drag. As a
result, NASA´s MOB-4 and MOB-7 have been able to demonstrate
on several occasions over the past three days (4/25-4/27)
that TiPS can be tracked in the blind.

In producing this solution we would especially like to
thank the European sites in Herstmonceux, Potsdam, Riga,
Metsahovi, Wettzell, and Borowiec, the NASA sites in
Greenbelt and Monument Peak and the ALTAIR radar crew in the
Marshall Islands. Working with you on this project has been
a pleasure. Furthermore, your support of this experiment has
made our successes possible and we are duly thankful.

We recognize that we have asked a great deal of you in
the past and have no right to make any further requests.
Having said that, to the extent that you have resources
available over the next week, we would be very interested to
learn if any of you have success in obtaining blind passes
using our latest ephemeris prediction.


Sincerely,

Bill Purdy, Program Manager
Shannon Coffey, Flight Operations Lead
Jim Barnds, Dynamics Analyst
Naval Research Laboratory
4555 Overlook Ave SW
Washington, DC 20375
United States
(202) 767-4001 (Voice)
(202) 404-7785 (Fax)

From: DSGJEH@cdslr3.atsc.allied.com

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