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Spacecraft Maneuvering at the Sun/Earth-Moon L2 Libration Point

Posted on:2011-11-13Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Ryerson University (Canada)Candidate:Shahid, KamranFull Text:PDF
GTID:2442390002467879Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Spacecraft formation flying in the vicinity of the Sun/Earth-Moon libration points offers many promising possibilities for space exploration. The concept of formation flying involves the distribution of the functionality of a single spacecraft among several smaller, cooperative spacecraft. The libration points are locations relative to two large orbiting bodies where a third body with relatively small mass can remain stationary relative to the two larger bodies. The most significant perturbation experienced by a spacecraft at the libration point is effect of solar radiation pressure. This thesis presents the development of nonlinear control techniques for maneuvering control at the Sun-Earth/Moon L2 libration point. A new thruster based formation control technique is presented. We also consider a leader/follower formation architecture, and examine the station keeping control of the leader spacecraft and the formation control of the follower spacecraft using solar radiation pressure. Reference trajectories of the leader spacecraft, halo and Lissajous orbits, are determined using a numerical technique in order to take into account all major gravitational perturbations. The nonlinear controllers are developed based on Lyapunov analysis, including non-adaptive and adaptive designs. Thruster based and solar radiation pressure based control laws for spacecraft maneuvering at the Sun-Earth/Moon libration point are developed. Higher order sliding mode control is utilized to address the non-affine structure of the solar sail control inputs. The reduced input solar radiation pressure problem is properly addressed as an underactuated control problem. The development of adaptive control for solar sail equipped spacecraft is an innovation and represents and advancement in solar sailing control technology. Controller performance is evaluated in a high fidelity ephemeris model to reflect a realistic simulated space environment. The numerical results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed control techniques for spacecraft maneuvering using solar radiation pressure at the L2 libration point. Stationkeeping accuracies of 50m and formation maintenance accuracies of less than 1m are possible using solar radiation pressure at a sub-L2 libration point. The benefits of these control techniques include increasing libration point mission lifetimes and doubling payload mass fractions as compared to conventional propulsion methods.
Keywords/Search Tags:Libration point, Spacecraft, Solar radiation pressure, Control techniques, Formation
PDF Full Text Request
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