Orbit determination methods for interplanetary missions: development and use of the Orbit14 software
Giacomo Lari, Giulia Schettino, Daniele Serra, Giacomo Tommei

TL;DR
This paper reviews orbit determination methods for interplanetary missions, introduces the Orbit14 software developed for processing radio-science data, and demonstrates its application to Juno and BepiColombo missions, highlighting recent results.
Contribution
It provides an extensive overview of orbit determination techniques and details the development and application of the Orbit14 software for interplanetary mission data analysis.
Findings
Successful application of Orbit14 to Juno gravity data
Simulations for BepiColombo's gravimetry and relativity experiments
Enhanced understanding of spacecraft orbit determination accuracy
Abstract
In the last years, a new generation of interplanetary space missions have been designed for the exploration of the solar system. At the same time, radio-science instrumentation has reached an unprecedented level of accuracy, leading to a significant improvement of our knowledge of celestial bodies. Along with this hardware upgrade, software products for interplanetary missions have been greatly refined. In this context, we introduce Orbit14, a precise orbit determination software developed at the University of Pisa for processing the radio-science data of the BepiColombo and Juno missions. Along the years, many tools have been implemented into the software and Orbit14 capitalized the experience coming from simulations and treatment of real data. In this paper, we present a review of orbit determination methods developed at the University of Pisa for radio-science experiments of…
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