Publication | Open Access
The Drifting Phase of SARAL: Securing Stable Ocean Mesoscale Sampling with an Unmaintained Decaying Altitude
28
Citations
24
References
2018
Year
EngineeringAltitude ControlGlobal Navigation Satellite SystemOceanographyMarine Geophysical DataUnmaintained Decaying AltitudePrecision NavigationEarth ScienceGeophysicsSatellite AltitudeSatellite MeasurementAtmospheric ScienceOceanographic ResearchSatellite ImagingGeostationary OrbitDrifting PhaseSynthetic Aperture RadarStable Ocean MesoscaleSatellite Navigation SystemsRadarPhysical OceanographyRemote SensingSpring 2016Space Geodesy
The French/Indian altimeter project Satellite with ARGOS and AltiKa (SARAL) completed its nominal 3-year mission on the historical European Remote-sensing Satellite (ERS) orbit in Spring 2016. In order to extend the lifetime of the satellite as much as possible, the agencies in charge of SARAL decided to initiate a so-called drifting phase where the satellite altitude is no longer maintained. In this paper we describe how the ocean mesoscale sampling capability of SARAL has been preserved during the drifting phase by initiating it at a specific altitude: the optimal starting point was approximately 1 km above the historical ERS/ENVIronment SATellite (ENVISAT) orbit. This strategy secured the ocean mesoscale sampling capability of SARAL drifting phase (DP) for 6 years or more. We also generalize these findings: any altimeter could follow SARAL’s drifting phase strategy if their maneuvering capability is limited. Lastly, we explain how an altimetry mission or an entire altimeter constellation could be operated without any form of altitude control: some specific altitude bands (e.g., near 1230 km) guarantee a high-quality mesoscale sampling for years or decades even if the altitude is not maintained.
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