Regression analysis with missing data and unknown colored noise: Application to the MICROSCOPE space mission

Quentin Baghi, Gilles Métris, Joël Bergé, Bruno Christophe, Pierre Touboul, and Manuel Rodrigues
Phys. Rev. D 91, 062003 – Published 13 March 2015

Abstract

The analysis of physical measurements often copes with highly correlated noises and interruptions caused by outliers, saturation events, or transmission losses. We assess the impact of missing data on the performance of linear regression analysis involving the fit of modeled or measured time series. We show that data gaps can significantly alter the precision of the regression parameter estimation in the presence of colored noise, due to the frequency leakage of the noise power. We present a regression method that cancels this effect and estimates the parameters of interest with a precision comparable to the complete data case, even if the noise power spectral density (PSD) is not known a priori. The method is based on an autoregressive fit of the noise, which allows us to build an approximate generalized least squares estimator approaching the minimal variance bound. The method, which can be applied to any similar data processing, is tested on simulated measurements of the MICROSCOPE space mission, whose goal is to test the weak equivalence principle (WEP) with a precision of 1015. In this particular context the signal of interest is the WEP violation signal expected to be found around a well defined frequency. We test our method with different gap patterns and noise of known PSD and find that the results agree with the mission requirements, decreasing the uncertainty by a factor of 60 with respect to ordinary least squares methods. We show that it also provides a test of significance to assess the uncertainty of the measurement.

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  • Received 23 December 2014

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.91.062003

© 2015 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Quentin Baghi1,*, Gilles Métris2,†, Joël Bergé1, Bruno Christophe1, Pierre Touboul1, and Manuel Rodrigues1

  • 1ONERA—The French Aerospace Lab, 29 avenue de la Division Leclerc, 92320 Chatillon, France
  • 2Geoazur (UMR 7329), Observatoire de la Cöte d’Azur Bt 4, 250 rue Albert Einstein, Les Lucioles 1, Sophia Antipolis, 06560 Valbonne, France

  • *quentin.baghi@onera.fr
  • gilles.metris@oca.eu

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Vol. 91, Iss. 6 — 15 March 2015

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