GNSS Radio Occultation on Aerial Platforms with Commercial Off-The-Shelf Receivers
Bryan C. Chan, Ashish Goel, Jonathan Kosh, Tyler G. R. Reid, Corey R., Snyder, Paul M. Tarantino, Saraswati Soedarmadji, Widyadewi Soedarmadji,, Kevin Nelson, Feiqin Xie, Michael Vergalla

TL;DR
This paper explores using affordable commercial GNSS receivers on weather balloons to perform radio occultation, aiming to enhance local weather monitoring capabilities with a low-cost, scalable solution validated through flight tests.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, low-cost method for implementing GNSS radio occultation on high-altitude balloons using COTS receivers, expanding weather data collection options.
Findings
Hardware prototypes demonstrate technical feasibility.
Flight tests confirm successful data collection.
Potential for enhanced local weather monitoring.
Abstract
In recent decades, GNSS Radio Occultation soundings have proven an invaluable input to global weather forecasting. The success of government-sponsored programs such as COSMIC is now complemented by commercial low-cost cubesat implementations. The result is access to more than 10,000 soundings per day and improved weather forecasting accuracy. This movement towards commercialization has been supported by several agencies, including the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Air Force (USAF) with programs such as the Commercial Weather Data Pilot (CWDP). This has resulted in further interest in commercially deploying GNSS-RO on complementary platforms. Here, we examine a so far underutilized platform: the high-altitude weather balloon. Such meteorological radiosondes are deployed twice daily at over 900…
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