Publications related to the GRACE Missions (no abstracts)

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Revisiting GRACE Follow-On KBR Antenna Phase Center Calibration by Addressing Multipath Noise

Li, Haosi, Xu, Peng, Tang, He, and Yi, Shuang, 2025. Revisiting GRACE Follow-On KBR Antenna Phase Center Calibration by Addressing Multipath Noise. Remote Sensing, 17(3):353, doi:10.3390/rs17030353.

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BibTeX

@ARTICLE{2025RemS...17..353L,
       author = {{Li}, Haosi and {Xu}, Peng and {Tang}, He and {Yi}, Shuang},
        title = "{Revisiting GRACE Follow-On KBR Antenna Phase Center Calibration by Addressing Multipath Noise}",
      journal = {Remote Sensing},
     keywords = {GRACE Follow-On, antenna offset correction, K-band ranging, multipath noise},
         year = 2025,
        month = jan,
       volume = {17},
       number = {3},
          eid = {353},
        pages = {353},
     abstract = "{The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRFO) mission
        precisely measures the inter-satellite range between the centers
        of mass of its twin satellites to map the earth's gravity field.
        The baseline ranging measurement is achieved using the K-band
        ranging (KBR) system, which is sensitive to satellite attitude
        variations caused by the offset between the satellite center of
        mass and the KBR antenna phase center. Accurate decoupling of
        the KBR range from attitude variations requires precise
        determination of the KBR's antenna offset vectors (AOVs). To
        address this, GRFO conducted eight KBR calibration maneuvers on
        17 and 28 September 2020. However, these maneuvers exaggerated
        the impact of microwave multipath noise, complicating AOV
        estimation. Existing studies have not fully mitigated this
        noise. This study introduces a new frequency-domain method to
        estimate AOVs by leveraging double-difference signals and
        analyzing their spectral characteristics, along with those of
        the KBR range during calibration maneuvers, to suppress
        multipath noise. Our recalibrated AOVs achieve good alignment
        between the KBR and laser ranging interferometer (LRI) ranging
        signals. We validate our recalibrated AOVs by comparing the
        residuals between the LRI and KBR ranging signals corrected
        using both recalibrated AOVs and documented AOVs. The results
        show that, for the majority (58.4\%) of the analyzed period
        (from January 2020 to June 2023), the residuals corrected by the
        recalibrated AOVs are closer to the LRI ranging signal. These
        findings demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method in
        addressing multipath noise and improving the accuracy of KBR
        range measurements. This work provides a framework for future
        gravity missions requiring precise calibration of multipath
        effects in inter-satellite ranging systems.}",
          doi = {10.3390/rs17030353},
       adsurl = {https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2025RemS...17..353L},
      adsnote = {Provided by the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System}
}

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