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On orbit performance of the GRACE Follow-On Laser Ranging Interferometer

Authors :
Abich, Klaus
Braxmaier, Claus
Gohlke, Martin
Sanjuan, Josep
Abramovici, Alexander
Okihiro, Brian Bachman
Barr, David C.
Bize, Maxime P.
Burke, Michael J.
Clark, Ken C.
de Vine, Glenn
Dickson, Jeffrey A.
Dubovitsky, Serge
Folkner, William M.
Francis, Samuel
Gilbert, Martin S.
Katsumura, Mark
Klipstein, William
Larsen, Kameron
Liebe, Carl Christian
Liu, Jehhal
McKenzie, Kirk
Morton, Phillip R.
Murray, Alexander T.
Nguyen, Don J.
Ravich, Joshua A.
Shaddock, Daniel
Spero, Robert
Spiers, Gary
Sutton, Andrew
Trinh, Joseph
Wang, Duo
Wang, Rabi T.
Ware, Brent
Woodruff, Christopher
Amparan, Bengie
Davis, Mike A.
Howell, James
Kruger, Micah
Lobmeyer, Lynette
Pierce, Robert
Reavis, Gretchen
Sileo, Michael
Stephens, Michelle
Baatzsch, Andreas
Dahl, Christian
Dahl, Katrin
Gilles, Frank
Hager, Philipp
Herding, Mark
Kaufer, Marina
Nicklaus, Kolja
Voss, Kai
Bogan, Christina
Danzmann, Karsten
Barranco, Germán Fernández
Heinzel, Gerhard
Koch, Alexander
Mahrdt, Christoph
Misfeldt, Malte
Müller, Vitali
Reiche, Jens
Schütze, Daniel
Sheard, Benjamin
Stede, Gunnar
Wegener, Henry
Eckardt, Andreas
Guenther, Burghardt
Mangoldt, Thomas
Zender, Bernd
Ester, Thomas
Heine, Frank
Seiter, Christoph
Windisch, Steve
Flatscher, Reinhold
Flechtner, Frank
Grossard, Nicolas
Hauden, Jerome
Hinz, Martin
Leikert, Thomas
Zimmermann, Marcus
Lebeda, Anton
Lebeda, Arnold
Source :
Phys. Rev. Lett. 123 031101 19 July 2019
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Laser Ranging Interferometer (LRI) instrument on the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) Follow-On mission has provided the first laser interferometric range measurements between remote spacecraft, separated by approximately 220 km. Autonomous controls that lock the laser frequency to a cavity reference and establish the 5 degree of freedom two-way laser link between remote spacecraft succeeded on the first attempt. Active beam pointing based on differential wavefront sensing compensates spacecraft attitude fluctuations. The LRI has operated continuously without breaks in phase tracking for more than 50 days, and has shown biased range measurements similar to the primary ranging instrument based on microwaves, but with much less noise at a level of $1\,{\rm nm}/\sqrt{\rm Hz}$ at Fourier frequencies above 100 mHz.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. Lett. 123 031101 19 July 2019
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1907.00104
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.031101