Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting

At very low orbital altitudes (≲450 km) the aerodynamic forces can become major attitude disturbances. Certain missions that would benefit from a very low operational altitude require stable attitudes. The use of internal shifting masses, actively shifting the location of the spacecraft center-of-ma...

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Main Authors: Josep Virgili-Llop, Halis C. Polat, Marcello Romano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Robotics and AI
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2019.00007/full
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spelling doaj-e92595ff5bf042a5a6cf9f27fc6497392020-11-24T21:14:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Robotics and AI2296-91442019-02-01610.3389/frobt.2019.00007408178Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass ShiftingJosep Virgili-LlopHalis C. PolatMarcello RomanoAt very low orbital altitudes (≲450 km) the aerodynamic forces can become major attitude disturbances. Certain missions that would benefit from a very low operational altitude require stable attitudes. The use of internal shifting masses, actively shifting the location of the spacecraft center-of-mass, thus modulating, in direction and magnitude, the aerodynamic torques, is here proposed as a method to reject these aerodynamic disturbances. A reduced one degree-of-freedom model is first used to evaluate the disturbance rejection capabilities of the method with respect to multiple system parameters (shifting mass, shifting range, vehicle size, and altitude). This analysis shows that small shifting masses and limited shifting ranges suffice if the nominal center-of-mass is relatively close to the estimated center-of-pressure. These results are confirmed when the analysis is extended to a full three rotational degrees-of-freedom model. The use of a quaternion feedback controller to detumble a spacecraft operating at very low altitudes is also explored. The analysis and numerical simulations are conducted using a nonlinear dynamic model that includes the full effects of the shifting masses, a realistic atmospheric model, and uncertain spacecraft aerodynamic properties. Finally, a practical implementation on a 3U CubeSat using commercial-off-the-shelf components is briefly presented, demonstrating the implementation feasibility of the proposed method.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2019.00007/fullspacecraft aerodynamicsattitude stabilizationVery Low Earth Orbitattitude controlshifting massesmovable masses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josep Virgili-Llop
Halis C. Polat
Marcello Romano
spellingShingle Josep Virgili-Llop
Halis C. Polat
Marcello Romano
Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting
Frontiers in Robotics and AI
spacecraft aerodynamics
attitude stabilization
Very Low Earth Orbit
attitude control
shifting masses
movable masses
author_facet Josep Virgili-Llop
Halis C. Polat
Marcello Romano
author_sort Josep Virgili-Llop
title Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting
title_short Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting
title_full Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting
title_fullStr Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting
title_full_unstemmed Attitude Stabilization of Spacecraft in Very Low Earth Orbit by Center-Of-Mass Shifting
title_sort attitude stabilization of spacecraft in very low earth orbit by center-of-mass shifting
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Robotics and AI
issn 2296-9144
publishDate 2019-02-01
description At very low orbital altitudes (≲450 km) the aerodynamic forces can become major attitude disturbances. Certain missions that would benefit from a very low operational altitude require stable attitudes. The use of internal shifting masses, actively shifting the location of the spacecraft center-of-mass, thus modulating, in direction and magnitude, the aerodynamic torques, is here proposed as a method to reject these aerodynamic disturbances. A reduced one degree-of-freedom model is first used to evaluate the disturbance rejection capabilities of the method with respect to multiple system parameters (shifting mass, shifting range, vehicle size, and altitude). This analysis shows that small shifting masses and limited shifting ranges suffice if the nominal center-of-mass is relatively close to the estimated center-of-pressure. These results are confirmed when the analysis is extended to a full three rotational degrees-of-freedom model. The use of a quaternion feedback controller to detumble a spacecraft operating at very low altitudes is also explored. The analysis and numerical simulations are conducted using a nonlinear dynamic model that includes the full effects of the shifting masses, a realistic atmospheric model, and uncertain spacecraft aerodynamic properties. Finally, a practical implementation on a 3U CubeSat using commercial-off-the-shelf components is briefly presented, demonstrating the implementation feasibility of the proposed method.
topic spacecraft aerodynamics
attitude stabilization
Very Low Earth Orbit
attitude control
shifting masses
movable masses
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2019.00007/full
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AT haliscpolat attitudestabilizationofspacecraftinverylowearthorbitbycenterofmassshifting
AT marcelloromano attitudestabilizationofspacecraftinverylowearthorbitbycenterofmassshifting
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