Jan P. Weiss
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Jan P. Weiss.
Marine Geodesy | 2010
Willy Bertiger; S. D. Desai; Angie Dorsey; Bruce J. Haines; Nate Harvey; Da Kuang; Ant Sibthorpe; Jan P. Weiss
We assess the accuracy of JPLs estimated OSTM/Jason-2 Global Positioning System (GPS)-determined orbits based on residuals to independent satellite laser ranging (SLR) data, compared with orbits produced by different software from different data (SLR/DORIS), Geophysical Data Record version C (GDR-C) orbits, and altimeter crossover tests. All of these tests are consistent with sub-cm radial accuracy: high elevation SLR residual standard deviation lies at 6.8 mm, RMS differences from GDR-C in the radial component typically fall below a cm, and altimeter crossovers from JPL orbits have a variance 89 mm2 smaller than altimeter crossovers from GDR-C orbits. Although RMS differences between radial components of different orbit solutions typically lie below a cm, we observe systematic dependences on both time and geography. The improved precision and accuracy of JPLs OSTM/Jason-2 orbit solutions rely on a new algorithm for applying constraints to integer carrier phase ambiguities. This algorithm is sufficiently robust to improve solutions despite half-cycle carrier phase identification issues in OSTM/Jason-2s BlackJack receiver. Although Jason-1 receiver performance differs, our algorithm should extend to Jason-1 processing (during the time span of nominal GPS receiver operations).
Journal of The Astronautical Sciences | 2011
Bruce J. Haines; Michael J. Armatys; Yoaz E. Bar-Sever; Willy Bertiger; S. D. Desai; Angela R. Dorsey; Christopher M. Lane; Jan P. Weiss
The advances in Precise Orbit Determination (POD) over the past three decades have been driven in large measure by the increasing demands of satellite altimetry missions. Since the launch of Seasat in 1978, both tracking-system technologies and orbit modeling capabilities have evolved considerably. The latest in a series of precise (TOPEX-class) altimeter missions is the Ocean Surface Topography Mission (OSTM, also Jason-2). GPS-based orbit solutions for this mission are accurate to 1-cm (radial RMS) within three to five hours of real time. These GPS-based orbit products provide the basis for a near-real time sea-surface height product that supports increasingly diverse applications of operational oceanography and climate forecasting.
Journal of Geodesy | 2010
Willy Bertiger; S. D. Desai; Bruce J. Haines; Nate Harvey; Angelyn W. Moore; S. E. Owen; Jan P. Weiss
Journal of Geodesy | 2011
Ant Sibthorpe; Willy Bertiger; S. D. Desai; Bruce J. Haines; Nate Harvey; Jan P. Weiss
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Bruce J. Haines; Yoaz E. Bar-Sever; Willy Bertiger; S. D. Desai; Nate Harvey; Aurore Sibois; Jan P. Weiss
Archive | 2014
Yoaz E. Bar-Sever; William Bertiger; Angela R. Dorsey; Nathaniel Harvey; Wenwen Lu; Kevin Miller; Mark A. Miller; Larry J. Romans; Anthony J. Sibthorpe; Jan P. Weiss; Miquel Garcia Fernandez; Jason N. Gross
Proceedings of the 23rd International Technical Meeting of The Satellite Division of the Institute of Navigation (ION GNSS 2010) | 2010
Willy Bertiger; Yoaz E. Bar-Sever; Nate Harvey; Kevin Miller; Larry J. Romans; Jan P. Weiss; Larry Doyle; Tara Solorzano; John Petzinger; Al Stell
Archive | 2013
Bruce J. Haines; Willy Bertiger; Shailen Desai; Nathaniel Harvey; Aurore Sibois; Jan P. Weiss
Archive | 2013
Willy Bertiger; Shailen Desai; Angie Dorsey; Miquel Garcia Fernandez; Bruce J. Haines; Tim Munson; Christina Selle; Jan P. Weiss; Wenwen Wu; Larry Young
Archive | 2008
Shailen Desai; Willy Bertiger; Bruce J. Haines; Da Kuang; Christopher M. Lane; Aurore Sibois; Frank H. Webb; Jan P. Weiss