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Achieving solar sail orbital maintenance with adjustable ballast masses in the ERTBP

Publication date: 1 January 2025

Source: Advances in Space Research, Volume 75, Issue 1

Author(s): Ehsan Abbasali, Amirreza Kosari, Majid Bakhtiari

A machine learning-based partial ambiguity resolution method for precise positioning in challenging environments

Journal of Geodesy - Fri, 01/17/2025 - 00:00
Abstract

Partial ambiguity resolution (PAR) has been widely adopted in real-time kinematic (RTK) and precise point positioning with augmentation from continuously operating reference station (PPP-RTK). However, current PAR methods, either in the position domain or the ambiguity domain, suffer from high false alarm and miss detection, particularly in challenging environments with poor satellite geometry and observations contaminated by non-line-of-sight (NLOS) effects, gross errors, biases, and high observation noise. To address these issues, a PAR method based on machine learning is proposed to significantly improve the correct fix rate and positioning accuracy of PAR in challenging environments. This method combines two support vector machine (SVM) classifiers to effectively identify and exclude ambiguities those are contaminated by bias sources from PAR without relying on satellite geometry. The proposed method is validated with three vehicle-based field tests covering open sky, suburban, and dense urban environments, and the results show significant improvements in terms of correct fix rate and positioning accuracy over the traditional PAR method that only utilizes ambiguity covariances. The fix rates achieved with the proposed method are 93.9%, 81.9%, and 93.1% with the three respective field tests, with no wrong fixes, compared to 72.8%, 20.9%, and 16.0% correct fix rates using the traditional method. The positioning error root mean square (RMS) is 0.020 m, 0.035 m, and 0.056 m in the east, north, and up directions for the first field test, 0.027 m, 0.080 m, and 0.126 m for the second field test, and 0.035 m, 0.042 m, and 0.071 m for the third field test. In contrast, only decimeter- to meter-level accuracy was obtainable with these datasets using the traditional method due to the high wrong fix rate. The proposed method provides a correct and fast time-to-first-fix (TTFF) of 3–5 s, even in challenging environments. Overall, the proposed method offers significant improvements in positioning accuracy and ambiguity fix rate with high reliability, making it a promising solution for PAR in challenging environments.

Author Correction: Recent uplift of Chomolungma enhanced by river drainage piracy

Nature Geoscience - Thu, 01/16/2025 - 00:00

Nature Geoscience, Published online: 16 January 2025; doi:10.1038/s41561-025-01643-1

Author Correction: Recent uplift of Chomolungma enhanced by river drainage piracy

Tidal Deformation and Dissipation Processes in Icy Worlds

Space Science Reviews - Thu, 01/16/2025 - 00:00
Abstract

Tidal interactions play a key role in the dynamics and evolution of icy worlds. The intense tectonic activity of Europa and the eruption activity on Enceladus are clear examples of the manifestation of tidal deformation and associated dissipation. While tidal heating has long been recognized as a major driver in the activity of these icy worlds, the mechanism controlling how tidal forces deform the different internal layers and produce heat by tidal friction still remains poorly constrained. As tidal forcing varies with orbital characteristics (distance to the central planet, eccentricity, obliquity), the contribution of tidal heating to the internal heat budget can strongly change over geological timescales. In some circumstances, the tidally-produced heat can result in internal melting and surface activity taking various forms. Even in the absence of significant heat production, tidal deformation can be used to probe the interior structure, the tidal response of icy moons being strongly sensitive to their hydrosphere structure. In the present paper, we review the methods to compute tidal deformation and dissipation in the different layers composing icy worlds. After summarizing the main principle of tidal deformation and the different rheological models used to model visco-elastic tidal response, we describe the dissipation processes expected in rock-dominated cores, subsurface oceans and icy shells and highlight the potential effects of tidal heating in terms of thermal evolution and activity. We finally anticipate how data collected by future missions to Jupiter’s and Saturn’s moons could be used to constrain their tidal response and the consequences for past and present activities.

Large burial flux of modern organic carbon in the St. Lawrence estuarine system indicates a substantial atmospheric carbon sink

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Yunfeng Wang, Jason M.E. Ahad, Alfonso O. Mucci, Yves Gélinas, Peter M.J. Douglas

Evidence for the role of tropical plumes in driving mid-Holocene north-west Sahara rainfall

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Hamish O. Couper, Christopher C. Day, Julia J. Barrott, Samuel J. Hollowood, Stacy A. Carolin, Ben Lovett, Abdeljalil Bouzouggar, Nick Barton, Gideon M. Henderson

Mantle discontinuities and reflectors beneath the Arctic Ocean and Aleutian-Alaska subduction zone: Evidence for MORB crust at the top of the lower mantle

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Y. Yuan, J.K. Magali, X. Deng, D. Sun, C. Thomas

Vanadium isotope fractionation during early planetary evolution: Insights from achondrite analyses

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): D.V. Bekaert, M. Auro, K. Righter, L.D. Peterson, A.W. Heard, D. Davis, E. Füri, Y. Marrocchi, A.J. Irving, K. Prissel, K. Burton, C. Fitoussi, S.G. Nielsen

Rheological and topographic implications of thermal insulation created by supercontinents

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): João Pedro Macedo Silva, Victor Sacek, Carlos Eduardo Ganade, Gianreto Manatschal

Stable Nd isotopic fractionation in REY-rich deep-sea sediments

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Jianghao Bai, Yinan Deng, Hao Wu, Xirong Liang, Xiaoxiao Yu, Ganglan Zhang, Gangjian Wei

On the possibility of exhaustive carbonation in geological carbon storage

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Jun Korenaga

Magnetite nanoparticles modulate microbial nitrate reduction pathway

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Pengcong Wang, Genming Luo, Dominic Papineau, Deng Liu, Hongmei Wang, Yiliang Li, Zongmin Zhu

Constraining the thermal structure of the subduction plate interface: Coupled petrologic and geodynamic study of high-pressure rocks of New Caledonia

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Sarah C. Penniston-Dorland, Ikuko Wada, Natalie H. Raia, Andrew Steele, Emma S. Bullock, Xin Zhou, Besim Dragovic, Peter E. van Keken

Numerical simulations of subduction, relamination and accretion of magmatic arcs – implications for continent-ocean convergent margins

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Petra Maierová, Karel Schulmann, Taras Gerya

Large-scale palaeoflow at the top of Earth's core

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Neil Suttie, Andreas Nilsson, Nicolas Gillet, Mathieu Dumberry

Ureilite precursor formation from an isotopically and chemically heterogeneous, isolated protoplanetary disk reservoir

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Pascal M. Kruttasch, Karen Ziegler, Julian-Christopher Storck, Nicolas D. Greber, Aryavart Anand, Klaus Mezger

Radiocarbon evidence of a North Atlantic intermediate water reconfiguration between the 1960s and 1980s

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Qian Liu, Laura F. Robinson, Erica Hendy, Joseph A. Stewart, Tao Li, Tianyu Chen, Timothy D.J. Knowles

Spatial patterns of dune landscapes manifest the history of boundary condition changes

Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 19:10

Publication date: 15 February 2025

Source: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 652

Author(s): Mingqing Zhu, Deguo Zhang, Peng Liang, Xiaoping Yang

Statics and dynamics of a lunar anchored tethered system

Publication date: 1 January 2025

Source: Advances in Space Research, Volume 75, Issue 1

Author(s): Lu Liu, Hong Deng, Junwei Luo, Weiwei Wang, Jiafu Liu

Regional triple-frequency integer clock estimation for augmented real-time positioning services

GPS Solutions - Wed, 01/15/2025 - 00:00
Abstract

This study addresses the frequent convergence issues of satellite clocks within regional network, with a particular focus on the multifrequency advantages using data from 25 uniformly distributed reference stations across China. Experimental results demonstrate that incorporating the third frequency significantly enhances the accuracy of BDS-3 clock solutions, reducing the root mean square (RMS) by 44.5%. Additionally, employing a 2-min smoothing interval, multifrequency inclusion increases the wide-lane (WL) fixing rate by 30.4% at low elevation angles, which in turn leads to a marked improvement in narrow-lane (NL) ambiguity resolution. By leveraging phase-wide-lane observations, the stable wide-lane phase bias enables the continuous generation of inter-frequency clock bias (IFCB), ensuring reliable cyclic sequence construction even when satellites exit the observed region. The effectiveness of regional observable specific bias (OSB) on ambiguity resolution at the user level is highlighted, and over 95% of GPS, BDS-3, and Galileo NL fractional biases below 0.15 cycles could be achieved. Furthermore, the single-epoch convergence rates of multi-constellation precise point positioning (PPP) reach horizontal 91.9% and vertical 84.5% for multifrequency, a substantial improvement over the dual-frequency, which does not exceed 25%.

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