Abstract

An accurate model of the Earth’s gravity field is beneficial for practical engineering and many applications in geosciences. European Space Agency (ESA) realized the Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) gradiometry mission between 2009 and 2013. However, the low-frequency drift of the onboard electrostatic accelerometers (EA) limits the observation accuracy of the GOCE mission to some extent. Advances in electrostatic and quantum technology offer new measurement concepts for future gradiometry missions. In this study, we evaluate the contributions of several types of accelerometers through numerical closed-loop simulation which rigorously maps the accelerometers’ sensitivities to the gravity field coefficients. In comparison to the simulated results of the GRADIO gradiometer used in GOCE, it is demonstrated that the MicroSTAR-type gradiometer has superior precision within degree and order 100 and provides more signal information in the off-diagonal components of the gravity gradient tensor (GGT). The precision of the gravity field model recovery from a HybridACC-type gradiometer is significantly affected by the noise level of the cold atom interferometry (CAI) accelerometer. A HybridACC-type gradiometer with low CAI performance (1×10-9m·s-2/Hz) only favors the high degree component because of its higher accuracy in the measurement bandwidth (MBW) between 5 mHz and 100 mHz. While a better CAI performance up to 1×10-11m·s-2/Hz will increase retrieval performance remarkably. With an orbital rotation compensation mechanism, the CAI gradiometer performs with greater accuracy overall. Otherwise, the accuracy based on this sort of gradiometer is only superior up to degree 50.

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