Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods

Using a solar sail, a spacecraft orbit can be offset from a central body such that the orbital plane is displaced from the gravitational center. Such a trajectory might be desirable for a single-spacecraft relay to support communications with an outpost at the lunar south pole. Although trajectory d...

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Main Authors: Geoffrey G. Wawrzyniak, Kathleen C. Howell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2011-01-01
Series:International Journal of Aerospace Engineering
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/476197
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spelling doaj-08637e1445ea4151ba1a0fa8445002ee2020-11-24T22:08:00ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Aerospace Engineering1687-59661687-59742011-01-01201110.1155/2011/476197476197Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference MethodsGeoffrey G. Wawrzyniak0Kathleen C. Howell1School of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 701 W. Stadium Avenue, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2045, USASchool of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University, 701 W. Stadium Avenue, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2045, USAUsing a solar sail, a spacecraft orbit can be offset from a central body such that the orbital plane is displaced from the gravitational center. Such a trajectory might be desirable for a single-spacecraft relay to support communications with an outpost at the lunar south pole. Although trajectory design within the context of the Earth-Moon restricted problem is advantageous for this problem, it is difficult to envision the design space for offset orbits. Numerical techniques to solve boundary value problems can be employed to understand this challenging dynamical regime. Numerical finite-difference schemes are simple to understand and implement. Two augmented finite-difference methods (FDMs) are developed and compared to a Hermite-Simpson collocation scheme. With 101 evenly spaced nodes, solutions from the FDM are locally accurate to within 1740 km. Other methods, such as collocation, offer more accurate solutions, but these gains are mitigated when solutions resulting from simple models are migrated to higher-fidelity models. The primary purpose of using a simple, lower-fidelity, augmented finite-difference method is to quickly and easily generate accurate trajectories.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/476197
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geoffrey G. Wawrzyniak
Kathleen C. Howell
spellingShingle Geoffrey G. Wawrzyniak
Kathleen C. Howell
Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods
International Journal of Aerospace Engineering
author_facet Geoffrey G. Wawrzyniak
Kathleen C. Howell
author_sort Geoffrey G. Wawrzyniak
title Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods
title_short Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods
title_full Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods
title_fullStr Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods
title_full_unstemmed Generating Solar Sail Trajectories in the Earth-Moon System Using Augmented Finite-Difference Methods
title_sort generating solar sail trajectories in the earth-moon system using augmented finite-difference methods
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Aerospace Engineering
issn 1687-5966
1687-5974
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Using a solar sail, a spacecraft orbit can be offset from a central body such that the orbital plane is displaced from the gravitational center. Such a trajectory might be desirable for a single-spacecraft relay to support communications with an outpost at the lunar south pole. Although trajectory design within the context of the Earth-Moon restricted problem is advantageous for this problem, it is difficult to envision the design space for offset orbits. Numerical techniques to solve boundary value problems can be employed to understand this challenging dynamical regime. Numerical finite-difference schemes are simple to understand and implement. Two augmented finite-difference methods (FDMs) are developed and compared to a Hermite-Simpson collocation scheme. With 101 evenly spaced nodes, solutions from the FDM are locally accurate to within 1740 km. Other methods, such as collocation, offer more accurate solutions, but these gains are mitigated when solutions resulting from simple models are migrated to higher-fidelity models. The primary purpose of using a simple, lower-fidelity, augmented finite-difference method is to quickly and easily generate accurate trajectories.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/476197
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AT kathleenchowell generatingsolarsailtrajectoriesintheearthmoonsystemusingaugmentedfinitedifferencemethods
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