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June 2014 Astronet-II School – Zielona Gora Advances in spacecraft autonomy and control University of Strathclyde, Glasgow Albert Caubet [email protected] www.strath.ac.uk/space Motivation – Active Debris Removal (ADR) J.-C. Liou, An active debris removal parametric study for LEO environment remediation June 2014 Albert Caubet 2 Motivation – Active Debris Removal § Capture techniques • • • • • Robotic arm Net Harpoon-tether Tentacles/Clamps Thruster plume (contactless) Astrium JAXA Ion-Beam Shepherd, Bombardelli June 2014 Albert Caubet 3 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) § Baseline design • • • • Compact module carried by chaser S/C Magnetic torque rods Primary battery (large energy density, but not rechargeable) Various avionics subsystems (OBC, power distribution, sensors, telemetry) • Module attached onto target (autonomous propulsive transfer) § Rationale • Risk reduction for chaser S/C • Relaxation of requirements on capture systems § Sizing based on Envisat model June 2014 Albert Caubet 4 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Battery Magnetorquers Subjection drills Thrusters Avionics Tanks 2. 5. 1. • Autonomous approach • Multiple attempts possible • S/C stays at a safe distance 6. 3. 4. 40 cm June 2014 Albert Caubet 5 System elements § Torque rod • Solenoid with a ferromagnetic core (Hiperco 50) • Two pairs of rods in square configuration • Magnetic moment: • In terms of wire properties and applied voltage: March 2014 Albert Caubet 6 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) § Control law • Affects sizing of torque rods and battery • Magnetic control torque: • Alternatives: o o o B-dot: Commutation (switching, on-off) Modified B-dot – moment not dependent on angular rate is the angular distance between the i-th torque rod and the magnetic field vector. Magnetic moment direction shall be dynamically adjusted so that torque opposes angular velocity June 2014 Albert Caubet 7 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) § Control law • Comparison using simplified 2D model 12000 0.12 On-Off law Modified B-dot B-dot law 0.08 0.06 0.04 8000 6000 4000 2000 0.02 0 10000 Energy [Wh] Angular rate (rad/s) 0.1 0 June 2014 20 40 60 80 100 Time (days) 120 140 160 0 Albert Caubet On-Off law Modified B-dot B-dot law 8 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) § Attitude determination • Magnetorquers interfere during magnetometer’s reading of Earth magnetic field • Absolute reference position using computer vision system on-board chaser – use chaser’s attitude sensors • Specially relevant for autonomous propulsive approach – Guidance and Navigation take place in the chaser University of Bristol June 2014 Albert Caubet 9 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) § System optimization • • • • • Use of simplified 2D model based on Envisat Analytical estimation of torque rod and battery mass and size Exhaustive search optimization Mass minimization Reasonable detumbling time § Design variables • Stabilization time • Power • Torque rod geometry June 2014 Albert Caubet 10 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) § Trade-off mass-time § Optimal mass at long stabilization time L = 850 mm; d = 25 mm 24 22 Mass (kg) 20 18 16 14 12 March 2014 0 20 40 60 Settling time (days) Albert Caubet 80 100 11 Attitude Stabilisation Electromagnetic Module (ASEM) • Torque rods 400 Am2 • Orbit 1000 km alt., 99 deg. Inc. • Tumbling rate 1 rpm = 6 deg/s • Wet mass: 19.7 kg • Stabilisation in 21.5 days June 2014 Albert Caubet 12 Conclusions & Future Work on ASEM § A 20-kg module would be able to detumble an Envisat-like satellite in 22 days § This system allows the chaser to be less agile, reduces risk during capture and relaxes requirements (e.g. robotic arms, GNC) § Extensive assessment of potential targets for ADR –orbit, tumbling rate, moments of inertia, etc § Scaling of the system with different targets and angular momentums § Optimal detumbling control method § ESA: Intended ITT on debris detumbling June 2014 Albert Caubet 13 Asteroid close proximity flight § Overview • Aerospace, automation & control, IT, telecom, security • Aerospace section: 150+ employees § 3-month internship § Goal: develop a guidance and control algorithm for asteroid hovering § Related missions • • • • • • Don Quijote (asteroid deflection) NEOShield (FP7) (asteroid deflection) AIDA (ESA + NASA) (asteroid deflection) Hayabusa (sample return) MarcoPolo-R (sample return) OSIRIS-Rex (sample return) June 2014 Albert Caubet 14 Asteroid close proximity flight § Asteroid deflection mission architecture • Orbiter o o o o Arrives months before impact Performs asteroid characterisation Can be used as beacon for the impactor Observes impact and measures the deflection • Impactor o o June 2014 Is guided towards the asteroid at very high terminal speed Transfers momentum to asteroid by inelastic impact and ejecta Albert Caubet 15 Asteroid close proximity flight § Close proximity operations • Inertial hovering o o o Fixed distance, e.g. on the line Sun-Asteroid For asteroid mapping (as it rotates below S/C) Centre of brightness navigation • Body-fixed hovering o o o Fixed position w.r.t. asteroid rotating frame, at low altitude Feature-based navigation (high image processing capability reqd.) For landing preparation • Landing o Transition from body-fixed hovering to touch-down (sample collection) • Orbiting o June 2014 Photo-Gravitational Stable Orbit (PGSO) for gravity characterisation Albert Caubet 16 Asteroid close proximity flight § Mission scenario • Asteroid: Didymos (binary) – Primary 800 m, secondary 150 m • Inertial hovering at 15 km and 100 km • Body-fixed hovering at 250 m and 45 deg latitude § Potential model for inertial hovering • Binary system (2 spheres) à “equivalent ellipsoid” • Coefficients of spherical harmonics potential to meet binary’s potential ! June 2014 Albert Caubet 17 Asteroid close proximity flight § Developing appropriate guidance & control • Hayabusa & others: control box / dead-band • Classic: PID • Advanced: Sliding Mode Control, Model Predictive Control, etc. “Required” vs “Nice To Have” June 2014 Albert Caubet 18 Thanks for your attention Questions, comments, suggestions are welcome [email protected]