Autonomous Crosslink Radionavigation for a Lunar CubeSat Mission
Erdem Turan, Stefano Speretta, Eberhard Gill

TL;DR
This paper proposes an autonomous satellite navigation system for lunar CubeSats using crosslink radiometric measurements, demonstrating high accuracy in simulations and potential simplification of communication systems.
Contribution
It introduces a LiAISON-based autonomous navigation method for lunar CubeSats, highlighting its advantages over ground-based strategies and analyzing measurement bias handling.
Findings
Range-only measurements outperform range-rate-only in this scenario.
Even less accurate ranging methods like data-aided ranging are sufficient.
Position states of the lunar orbiter are most observable.
Abstract
This study presents an autonomous orbit determination system based on crosslink radiometric measurements applied to a future lunar CubeSat mission to clearly highlight its advantages with respect to existing ground-based navigation strategies. This work is based on the Linked Autonomous Interplanetary Satellite Orbit Navigation (LiAISON) method which provides an autonomous navigation solution solely using satellite-to-satellite measurements, such as range and/or range-rate, to estimate absolute spacecraft states when at least one of the involved spacecraft has an orbit with a unique size, shape, and orientation. The lunar vicinity is a perfect candidate for this type of application due to the asymmetrical gravity field: the selected lunar mission, an Earth-Moon L2 (EML2) Halo orbiter, has an inter-satellite link between a lunar elliptical frozen orbiter. Simulation results show that,…
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Taxonomy
MethodsGravity
