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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B1. Istanbul 2004
2.2 Available means of measure
For the 1% interpretation level, analyses only concerned stellar
location unit attitude restitution. In fact, different sources for
attitude restitution are available and can be compared : the
theoretical requested attitude, the stellar location unit attitude,
the on board attitude control system (AOCS) which do not
involve the star tracker, and finally the star tracker does its own
attitude restitution. All these data are stored each time the
satellite is in visibility of Toulouse, the main ground station,
and available in a data base for further analysis.
For the 2" interpretation level, system location monitoring data
is used. It consists in a database of images on specific location
sites all over the world, constantly updated : approximately one
image for each SPOTS instrument is acquired each month on
each site for this monitoring. Sites have been chosen for their
cartographic data availability and also for their repartition all
over the world in particular with latitude (see figure 3).
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Figure 3: SPOTS location sites around the world : circle = main
site, diamond = secondary site, triangle = no more used
Ground control points are taken on every image of this database
and specific tools allow computation of the system location
performance and also interpretation of the errors in terms of
chosen parameters. Available parameters are polynomials up to
degree 2 for attitude angles, bias for satellite position, bias for
detectors viewing angles, focal length adjustment and potential
rotation of CCD array in the focal plane. Thanks to the world-
wide repartition of the sites, and the constant update of the
database, analysis of errors dependencies with satellite orbit
position and with acquisition time can be done.
The 3" interpretation level has been performed in co-operation
with French National Geographic Institute Space Department
(IGN Espace) involved in the working group. IGN has put on
some important means in order to ensure that Reference3D
horizontal location performance is met. Analyses of bundle
block adjustment process and errors for both monitoring sites
and Reference3D production blocks has been performed. The
large size of some production sites allows detection of specific
behaviours which can not be seen in any other ways.
Finally, when necessary, specific information about thermal
behaviour, available thanks to on board thermistances, have
also been analysed.
3. ANALYSIS RESULTS AND IMPROVMENTS
CARRIED OUT
In this section, we will describe for each level of interpretation
the main phenomena detected and studied and the
improvements brought out of it.
3.1 Attitude restitution analysis
Stellar location unit attitude restitution is a new one on board a
SPOT satellite and it had to be finely checked out because it
determines the major part of HRS' location performance.
Its high frequency performances have been assessed by
comparison of image matching grids with location grids using
the stellar location unit attitude data. It showed out remainders
lower than 1 m (0.1 HRS pixel) when a disturbance such as a
mirror movement is present, and usual microvibration lower
than 50 cm (0.05 HRS pixel). See [Valorge, 2003] for more
details about it.
Comparisons between different attitude sources showed out an
accordance between all of them, and highlighted several
phenomena which do not put in question ULS' performances
level but whose impact on the location performance has been
studied. From it, two possible improvements have been
identified.
First, some roll perturbation of ULS attitude was present
because of a deformation of the structure supporting the star
tracker. This phenomenon has been removed thanks to an
adaptation of the on board thermal control parameters. It
allowed to gain a few meters on absolute location performance
and time registration performance.
Second, a possible improvement of the filtering process of the
stellar location unit algorithm has been identified in order to
remove measures gap due to confusion between stars and
proton's impacts. This phenomenon only impacts a very small
proportion of images and should soon disappear thanks to an on
board modification.
3.2 System location performances analysis
Analysis carried on location performances measured for each
HRS camera concerned both relative location (difference of
location between the two HRS), and absolute location (mean
location of the two HRS).
At first sight, relative location appeared to be very noisy across
the track. This was a problem because as measuring HRS'
relative roll gives an estimation of the satellite yaw, it meant
that satellite's yaw estimation was noisy too. This noise has
been related to a deformation of the foot supporting the cameras
and greatly decreased thanks to an adaptation of thermal control
thresholds.
Before the modification, the standard deviation for HRS relative
location across the track was about 20 m, and it went down to
7 m after (see figure 4). In the same time, the standard deviation
for satellite yaw estimation out of HRS' relative roll went from
100 microradians before down to 12 microradians after.