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US-EUSST SSA Data Exchange for Improved Orbital SafetyData sharing and exchange among different Space Situational Awareness (SSA) data collectors/providers is frequently discussed as a mechanism to improve the accuracy and precision of orbital safety products. Indeed, at the conceptual level this claim is quite sensible: objects with more tracking, and thus presumably better distribution of that tracking about their orbit, should produce updates with smaller epoch errors and more realistic covariances at epoch, which should then translate into better performance in prediction and thus improved close approach calculations. However, this thesis has not been verified with any large study involving two different data providers, through which the amount of realized improvement can be quantified and, perhaps more importantly, the logistics of effecting observation data sharing in a regularized way can be established and circulated to assist others.

To create rubrics for helpful data sharing for conjunction assessment applications, and to collect empirical data on the improvements achieved through sharing of measurement data, the US Office of Space Commerce and the European Union Space Surveillance and Tracking (EUSST) Support Framework have embarked on a joint experiment to collect and exchange satellite metric observations on selected satellites of interest over an experimental period. Each entity will perform orbit determination with their own observations, the other entity’s observations, and with both observation data sets combined. The product results will be compared with each other, showing differences attributable both to the three different data groups and to the two entities’ different approaches to orbit determination. The exemplar satellites include both objects that have external precision reference ephemerides and those that do not, allowing the experiment to exercise both precision-comparison and assimilative-comparison techniques.

The present reporting will give preliminary results and a set of lessons learned for data sharing; a second presentation later in 2023 will provide a full accounting of the experiment’s results. The hope is that, through this work, a pathway can be established for the expeditious and fruitful sharing among collection entities, both commercial and governmental.
Document ID
20220018618
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
M. Hejduk
(The Aerospace Corporation El Segundo, California, United States)
F. Hoots
(The Aerospace Corporation El Segundo, California, United States)
P. Ramsey
(The Aerospace Corporation El Segundo, California, United States)
K. Auman
(THE AEROSPACE CORPORATION El Segundo, California, United States)
F. Delmas
(Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales Paris, France)
V. Baral
(Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales Paris, France)
C. Pérez Hernández
(Centre for Industrial Technological Development Madrid, Spain)
S. Leonard
(United States Department of Commerce Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Date Acquired
December 7, 2022
Subject Category
Astrodynamics
Meeting Information
Meeting: 9th Annual Space Traffic Management Conference
Location: Austin, TX
Country: US
Start Date: March 1, 2023
End Date: March 2, 2023
Sponsors: International Academy of Astronautics (IAA)
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80GSFC19F0127
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80GSFC19D0011
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
space situational awareness
data sharing
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