DocumentCode :
2679395
Title :
The propagation of stable radio frequency signals through the atmosphere
Author :
Naudet, Charles ; Jacobs, Christopher ; Keihm, Steve ; Lanyi, Gabor ; Resch, George ; Riely, L. ; Rosenberger, Hans ; Tanner, Alan
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
fYear :
2000
fDate :
2000
Firstpage :
578
Lastpage :
585
Abstract :
The terrestrial troposphere and ionosphere are known to have strong effects on the radiation fields traversing them. The primary types of effects are refraction (deflection, polarization rotation, propagation velocity changes), absorption, and scattering by the turbulent structure in the media. In particular, the phase accuracy of interferometric measurements and spacecraft Doppler tracking at frequencies greater than 5 GHz are dominated by fluctuations in the distribution of water vapor. The Deep Space Network is supporting the Gravitational Wave Experiment (GWE) on the Cassini spacecraft by providing atmospheric media calibration for precise Doppler tracking. The two-way communication link between the ground station and the Cassini spacecraft are in effect an “antenna” for gravitational waves that will perturb the phase of the RF signal between the Earth and the spacecraft. The experiment is sensitive to gravitational wave perturbations larger than the noise level fluctuations of 3×10-15 as measured in the Allan Standard Deviation Domain. We have designed and are testing a new atmospheric calibration system to sense line-of-sight water vapor and its physical temperature with a goal of calibrating 95% or more of water vapor fluctuation during the Cassini GWE. The calibration system consists of a newly designed water vapor radiometer having a 1 degree sensing beamwidth, a microwave temperature profiler to constrain the vertical distribution of the vapor physical temperature, and surface meteorology. Two complete water vapor calibration systems have been constructed in order to provide side-by-side testing capability as well as backup during the actual experiment. We will report on an independent test of these calibrations systems done by comparing them to a short baseline radio interferometric measurement at our Goldstone complex
Keywords :
Doppler measurement; electromagnetic wave polarisation; electromagnetic wave refraction; electromagnetic wave scattering; ionospheric electromagnetic wave propagation; microwave propagation; radiowave interferometry; radiowave propagation; tropospheric electromagnetic wave propagation; Allan Standard Deviation Domain; Cassini spacecraft; Deep Space Network; Gravitational Wave Experiment; absorption; atmospheric calibration system; atmospheric media calibration; interferometric measurements; microwave temperature profiler; noise level fluctuations; phase accuracy; polarization rotation; precise Doppler tracking; propagation velocity; refraction; scattering; stable radio frequency signal propagation; surface meteorology; terrestrial ionosphere; terrestrial troposphere; turbulent structure; two-way communication link; vertical distribution; water vapor; Atmospheric measurements; Atmospheric waves; Calibration; Fluctuations; RF signals; Radio frequency; Satellite ground stations; Space vehicles; System testing; Temperature sensors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Frequency Control Symposium and Exhibition, 2000. Proceedings of the 2000 IEEE/EIA International
Conference_Location :
Kansas City, MO
ISSN :
1075-6787
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5838-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FREQ.2000.887420
Filename :
887420
Link To Document :
بازگشت