JohnRoth wrote:I've always imagined them to be something like the recent mission that mapped the lunar gravity field - two really simple satellites that used a laser ranging device to detect the subtle shifts in relative orbital velocity due to unevenness in the gravitational field.
There are advantages to having a few thousand relatively simple and relatively dumb nodes separated by hundreds if not thousands of kilometers and connected only by the beams of the ranging lasers.
Given sufficiently sophisticated analytical software, their positioning doesn't have to be all that good, either. In fact, there are real advantages to just sticking them in orbit and leaving them there until they have to be picked up for servicing.
Comparison to the lunar gravity mapping mission isn't bad, but probably not quite right. Since we know that a single ship, even a small ship, can detect gravitic signals, detection clearly does not require multiple independent detectors. A closer analogy is probably the Very Large Array, the array of radio telescopes in New Mexico. Hundreds or thousands of individual elements, each of which is a complete gravitic detector, combining their signals together to obtain a resolution equivalent to a single detector as wide as the farthest points of the array. It would not have the sensitivity (signal strength) of a single detector that large--the signal strength would only be the sum of the signals from the individual elements. But the array would be able to pinpoint the signals it detects with the accuracy of a detector that large.