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Multipoint Geospace Science in 3D: The Paired Ionosphere-Thermosphere Orbiters(PITO) MissionThe science enabled by the Paired Ionosphere-Thermosphere Orbiters (PITO) mission is described and discussed. PITO has been designed to provide the concurrent, three-dimensional, multipoint measurements needed to advance geospace science while staying within a stringent resource envelope. The mission utilizes a pair of orbiting vehicles in eccentric, high-inclination, coplanar orbits. The orbits have arguments of perigee that differ by 180 degrees and are phased such that one vehicle is at perigee (~200 km) while the second is at apogee (~2000 km). Half an orbit later, the vehicles switch positions. Three complementary types of measurements exploit this scenario: local, in-situ measurements on both satellites, two-dimensional imaging from the higher satellite, and vertical sounders. The main idea is that two-dimensional context information for the low-altitude measurements is obtained by the high altitude imagers, while information on the third dimension is provided by vertical profiling. Such an observation system is capable of providing elements of global coverage, regional coverage, and concurrent coverage in three dimensions. Science goals are presented, as are the results of a detailed implementation plan, including several trade studies on key elements of the mission. The conclusion is that the mission would enable significant new understanding of the ionosphere-thermosphere system within a resource envelope that is consistent with that of NASA's Medium Explorer (MIDEX) line of science missions.
Document ID
20100035294
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Clemmons, J.
(Aerospace Corp. United States)
Walterscheid, R.
(Aerospace Corp. United States)
Nigg, D.
(Aerospace Corp. United States)
Judnick, D.
(Aerospace Corp. United States)
Lang, J.
(Aerospace Corp. United States)
Spann, J.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
August 8, 2010
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
M10-0503
Report Number: M10-0503
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2010 The Meeting of the Americas - Multi-Point Perspectives of Space Plasma
Location: Foz de Iguassu
Country: Brazil
Start Date: August 8, 2010
End Date: August 13, 2010
Sponsors: American Geophysical Union
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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