I've been doing some accuracy tests lately to check on the accuracy of my experimental photographic camera setup, as I am always striving for improvement.After comparing some of my datapoints with data by others on the same satellites earlier (see earlier blog entries), I took advantage of the current start of nice and favourable ISS evening passes to use ISS as a test target and compare obtained positions to an accurate ISS TLE.I obtained 4 positions from 2 images for ISS during last evenings 19:55 UTC pass: two (the first two) with ISS in the zenith, two with ISS going into eclips low in the southeast.25544 98 067A 4352 F 20050904195525800 17 75 1900355+263390 25544 98 067A 4352 F 20050904195536500 17 75 1952060+282850 25544 98 067A 4352 F 20050904195635800 17 75 2321209+227230 25544 98 067A 4352 F 20050904195646500 17 75 2339494+210810Using Scott Campbell's SatFit I compared them to an accurate TLE for epoch 05247.96166413The result is as follows: AZ EL ASP XTRK deltaT Perr ( 1) 184.50 64.32 83.18 0.02 -0.02 0.028 ( 2) 157.31 65.03 94.14 0.01 -0.02 0.027 ( 3) 96.58 34.40 137.74 0.00 -0.06 0.032 ( 4) 94.09 30.36 141.68 0.03 0.17 0.091sum 0.05184Of course I was very happy with this result. When I use the TLE issued previous to the above one (05247.68884259), I get: AZ EL ASP XTRK deltaT Perr ( 1) 184.50 64.32 83.17 0.03 0.18 0.204 ( 2) 157.31 65.03 94.12 0.03 0.18 0.205 ( 3) 96.58 34.40 137.73 0.00 0.13 0.067 ( 4) 94.09 30.36 141.66 0.03 0.37 0.171sum 0.17140...and the truth will be somewhere inbetween I guess.The 4th point merits some comment, as it clearly deviates in the series. The reason is that the 4th point was obtained while ISS was going into eclips fast. Instead of being the true end of the trail due to the end of the exposure (the reference time for this point), it probably is the point where ISS crossed the imaging threshold of the camera while fading out. Hence it being "too late" compared to the other points.I've been thinking about the pittfals of my system, and the obvious one is pointed out by point 4 in the above series. A start- or endpoint of a trail is not reliable when it is not marking the start or end of the exposure, but the point where the brightness of the satellite crosses the imaging threshold, the trail limiting magnitude of the camera. This can happen when the sat fades in or fades out (or both) or is faint and irregular in brightness. When that is the case, it should translate in a first point that is apparently "too early", and/or a second point that is apparently "too late". Whenever such things are visible in my data compared to other datapoints, this is probably the reason.But for a bright sat not near eclips, this ISS test again suggests the digital camera system performs quite well.So far this little, encouraging test. Hereby, I also want to thank Scott Campbell for making available his software.
posted by SatTrackCam Leiden at 08:16 on 05-Sep-2005
"Encouraging accurracy test using ISS"
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