Presentation + Paper
15 June 2023 ICESat-2/ATLAS at 4 years: instrument performance and projected life
Anthony J. Martino, John Cavanaugh, Aimee Gibbons, James E. Golder, Alvaro Ivanoff, Peggy Jester, Nathan Kurtz, Thomas Neumann, Almut Pingel, Craig Swenson
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
NASA’s ICESat-2 mission launched in September 2018 carrying a single instrument, the Advanced Topographic Laser Altimeter System (ATLAS). ATLAS uses a high-repetition-rate, low-pulse-energy laser with its output split into six beams and a photon-counting receiver to measure Earth surface elevation with centimeter-level precision, repeating its ground track every 91 days. During more than four years of on-orbit operation, ATLAS has met or exceeded its lifetime and performance requirements. We present performance measurements, trends and projections for several instrument parameter, including transmitted laser pulse energy, receiver sensitivity, the instrument’s impulse response, transmitter/receiver alignment, dead-time behavior, and elevation measurement performance. The laser energy setting was increased in September 2023, for the first time, to maintain ranging performance at its earlymission level. The trends in instrument parameters indicate capability to continue on-orbit operation of ATLAS for many years into the future.
Conference Presentation
© (2023) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Anthony J. Martino, John Cavanaugh, Aimee Gibbons, James E. Golder, Alvaro Ivanoff, Peggy Jester, Nathan Kurtz, Thomas Neumann, Almut Pingel, and Craig Swenson "ICESat-2/ATLAS at 4 years: instrument performance and projected life", Proc. SPIE 12512, Advanced Photon Counting Techniques XVII, 125120A (15 June 2023); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2665113
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KEYWORDS
Equipment

Receivers

Pulse signals

Photons

Laser energy

Calibration

Space operations

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