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Time and Polar Motion in Early NASA Spacecraft Navigation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

Paul M. Muller*
Affiliation:
Institute for Applied Astronomy, Maison Tournesol Rue de la Garrigue, Lauzerte 82110, France

Abstract

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Inclusion of Polar Motion and UT1 data (corrections) is essential to achieving the full accuracy in NASA (and other) spacecraft navigation. Tracking station locations are routinely determined to the meter-level and must be available inertially (on the rotating Earth) to equal accuracy a priori in real-time. This implies knowledge of UT1 to 2.5ms and polar motion to lm (and for practical use for the first time accurately predicted and disseminated to the navigation computer programs). This was essential from 1965 onward as we prepared for Apollo, for Apollo itself, and all subsequent missions. This paper presents the history behind the author’s “discovery” circa 1965 at JPL that UT1 and polar motion were not then included in NASA’s Orbit Determination models and programs; how this omission was being “observed” in station location determinations (and errors) from spacecraft radio tracking data; how it was rectified; the essential nature of these data in precision spacecraft navigation including Apollo; and how this became undoubtedly the highest and most critical application of these data in history. There followed widespread recognition of the many observers present and past who tirelessly and often with little visibility outside of professional astronomy made the necessary observations and calculations. As an historical paper, there is room for a few interesting anecdotes and personalities in NASA, as well as the late and much missed Dr. Markowitz then head of the USNO time service, and his successor Dr. Klock, with both of whom the author had the honor, professional benefit, and great personal pleasure of working during this time.

Type
Part 2. History of the International Latitude Service, Bureau International de l’Heure, International Earth Rotation Service and Polar Motion Applications
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of the Pacific 2000