1999
DOI: 10.1109/7.805436
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Predicting the visibility of LEO satellites

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Cited by 71 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…A more appealing solution is based on the Doppler effect. The application of Doppler-based techniques proved to be an efficient and low-complexity method for the estimation of the location of a user terminal and the prediction of the time instant of the handover occurrence [16,17,35,36]. Doppler-based techniques necessitate satellites with on-board processing capabilities.…”
Section: Non-persevering Bandwidth Allocationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A more appealing solution is based on the Doppler effect. The application of Doppler-based techniques proved to be an efficient and low-complexity method for the estimation of the location of a user terminal and the prediction of the time instant of the handover occurrence [16,17,35,36]. Doppler-based techniques necessitate satellites with on-board processing capabilities.…”
Section: Non-persevering Bandwidth Allocationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This data has been modeled in mathematical curves by MATLAB software in sections 2 and 3 and the accuracy and credibility of these fitted equations, which can be used as indicators of real data; have been tested statistically. Knowing a satellite's TLE parameters and a station's geographical position, has made it possible to obtain analytical relations which can approximate the number and duration of daily passes or in other name daily visions of the satellite by the station ; some samples of these relations can be found in references [4][5][6]. What can be said about these relations is that:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An earlier approach proposed in [3] gives a closed-form solution for the visibility periods about an oblate Earth. The authors of [4] provide a simple algorithm to determine the visibility-time function at a given location on Earth for circular low earth orbit (LEO) satellites. The authors of [5] propose the true anomaly iteration compensation algorithm to determine the visibility-time function of satellites on elliptical orbits at a given location on Earth.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%