English

Revisiting the orbital tracking problem

Applications 2019-09-25 v2 Computational Physics

Abstract

Consider a space object in an orbit about the earth. An uncertain initial state can be represented as a point cloud which can be propagated to later times by the laws of Newtonian motion. If the state of the object is represented in Cartesian earth centered inertial (Cartesian-ECI) coordinates, then even if initial uncertainty is Gaussian in this coordinate system, the distribution quickly becomes non-Gaussian as the propagation time increases. Similar problems arise in other standard fixed coordinate systems in astrodynamics, e.g. Keplerian and to some extent equinoctial. To address these problems, a local "Adapted STructural (AST)'' coordinate system has been developed in which uncertainty is represented in terms of deviations from a "central state". Given a sequence of angles-only measurements, the iterated nonlinear extended (IEKF) and unscented (IUKF) Kalman filters are often the most appropriate variants to use. In particular, they can be much more accurate than the more commonly used non-iterated versions, the extended (EKF) and unscented (UKF) Kalman filters, especially under high eccentricity. In addition, iterated Kalman filters can often be well-approximated by two new closed form filters, the observation-centered extended (OCEKF) and unscented (OCUKF) Kalman filters.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.03793,
  title  = {Revisiting the orbital tracking problem},
  author = {John T. Kent and Shambo Bhattacharjee and Weston R. Faber and Islam I. Hussein},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.03793},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

37 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:09:36.764Z