Navigation using pulsars ASTRONOMY AND SPACE SCIENCE George
Hobbs Nov 2014
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Message on Pioneer 10, 11 and Voyager space probes Presentation
title | Presenter name | Page 2 Picture credits: wikipedia
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Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 3 Sound files from
the Parkes and Jodrell Bank Observatories
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Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 4
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Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 5
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The Crab Supernova Presentation title | Presenter name | Page
6
Slide 8
CSIRO. Gravitational wave detection An ancient Chinese
Astronomer in AD1054
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CSIRO. Gravitational wave detection So what happened?
http://www.spacetelescope.org/videos/html/heic0609b.html
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Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 9 Michael Kramer,
MPiFR
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Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 10
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Pulsar Properties Diameter ~ 10-20 km Mass ~ 1.4 solar masses
Density ~ 10 17 kg.m -3 Thimbleful has a mass of 10 9 tonnes
Rotates once to several hundred times per second Acceleration due
to gravity at surface of pulsar is ~ 10 12 m.s -2 (cf 10 m.s -2 at
Earths surface). Magnetic field of ~ 10 8 T (Sun ~ 10 -4 T) Approx
2,000 known pulsars. CSIRO: PULSE@Parkes | Robert Hollow |
Animation: M. Kramer
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Why we study pulsars CSIRO. Gravitational wave detection
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Change of topic --- the Global positioning system (GPS)
1.Everyone uses GPS (aircraft, cars, military, mapping, )
2.Problems: a. GPS can be jammed, b. can be switched off 3.GPS is
now such a significant part of our lives that the effects of
failure would be catastrophic affect all emergency services, all
systems of traffic control we would not be able to stock our shops
and feed ourselves.. On the Map Simon Garfield. 4.Cannot be used
for deep-space navigation Presentation title | Presenter name |
Page 13
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Pulsar navigation 1.Plaque on Pioneer spacecraft: relative
position of the Sun to the center of the galaxy and 14 pulsars!
2.Demonstrates basic idea: the pulsars are a galactic-scale GPS!
Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 14 wikipedia
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The basic idea Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 15
http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~wbecker/psrnav/index.htmlhttp://www.mpe.mpg.de/~wbecker/psrnav/index.html:
Individual images: Rosetta (courtesy of ESA), starship Enterprise
from the TV series Star Trek. Compilation by MPE.
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Example: where is the Parkes telescope? Unpublished work by G.
Hobbs and X. You 1.Assume that were on the Earths surface 2.Use
Parkes timing observations and fit for position of Parkes
Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 16
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Proof of concept where is Parkes? Unpublished work by G. Hobbs
and X. You 1.Assume that were on the Earths surface 2.Use pulsars
observations and fit for position of Parkes Presentation title |
Presenter name | Page 17
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Proof of concept where is Parkes? Unpublished work by G. Hobbs
and X. You 1.Assume that were on the Earths surface 2.Use Parkes
timing observations and fit for position of Parkes Presentation
title | Presenter name | Page 18 Use millisecond pulsar (PSR
J0437-4715) Correct position to within a few kilometers
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Can navigate spacecraft: Earth to Mars trajectory (recent paper
by Deng et al. 2013) 1.Cant fit the Parkes telescope on top of your
car! => try smaller telescope => X-ray telescopes! 2.Can we
use millisecond pulsar observations to determine the position and
velocity of a spacecraft travelling from Earth to Mars? 3.Use
software to simulate trajectory accounts for gravitational field,
Solar pressure etc. 4.Assume large ground-based radio telescope to
get pulsar timing model before launch 5.Assume XTE-type X-ray
telescope on- board the spacecraft Presentation title | Presenter
name | Page 19 http://www.master-flight-
training.org/images/AGI_STK.jp g
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Two algorithms studied 1.Algorithm 1: assumes no prior
knowledge of the space-craft trajectory 2.Algorithm 2: makes use of
a dynamics model for the space-craft motion 3.Result: position
estimation better than 10km 4.Result: velocity estimation better
than 1m/s Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 20
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Will pulsar navigation really work? 1.Technique will work for
interplanetary spacecraft 2.USA, China, Europe and Australia
working of techniques and implementation 3.Personally not sure
about terrestrial or Earth-orbit navigation using pulsars (need a
very sensitive detector) were thinking about it! 4.One day we may
leave our solar system and navigate to other stars using pulsars!
Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 21
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Will pulsar navigation really work? 1.Technique will work for
interplanetary spacecraft 2.USA, China, Europe and Australia
working of techniques and implementation 3.Personally not sure
about terrestrial or Earth-orbit navigation using pulsars (need a
very sensitive detector) were working on it! 4.One day we may leave
our solar system and navigate to other stars using pulsars! 5. but
I do hope that the GPS is working on my flight back home!
Presentation title | Presenter name | Page 22
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Thank you CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science George Hobbs
Research Scientist t+61 2 9372 4652 [email protected] w
www.atnf.csiro.au/people/g hobbs CSIRO ASTRONOMY AND SPACE
SCIENCE