Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation

The innovative idea of distributing the functionality of current larger satellites among smaller, cooperative satellites has been sincerely considered for assorted space missions to accomplish goals that are not possible or very difficult to do with a single satellite. Additionally, the utilization...

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Main Author: Tomlin, Stephen D.
Other Authors: Agrawal, Brij N.
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/7781
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-77812014-11-27T16:07:10Z Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation Tomlin, Stephen D. Agrawal, Brij N. The innovative idea of distributing the functionality of current larger satellites among smaller, cooperative satellites has been sincerely considered for assorted space missions to accomplish goals that are not possible or very difficult to do with a single satellite. Additionally, the utilization of smaller satellites is maximized within formations and clusters to conduct missions such as interferometry and earth-sensing. This paper presents a methodology to describe, populate and analyze numerous formation designs employing the use of Hill's equations of motion to describe a formation's dynamics. These equations of motion are then programmed into a MATLAB code to produce Cartesian elements for input into a Satellite Tool Kit(Trademark) (STK) simulation that demonstrates numerous possible cluster formation designs. These simulations are then used to determine delta V requirements for overcoming LEO- type perturbations that were modeled within STK's High Precision Orbit Propagator (HPOP). Finally, components from two subsystems Attitude Determination and Control (ADCS) and Propulsion, using the delta V calculations from the simulation analysis and current advances in MicroElectroMechanical systems (MEMs) and nanosatellite technology, are presented based on a mass constraint of 10kg for the entire satellite 2012-08-09T18:48:10Z 2012-08-09T18:48:10Z 2000-06-01 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/7781 a266804 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description The innovative idea of distributing the functionality of current larger satellites among smaller, cooperative satellites has been sincerely considered for assorted space missions to accomplish goals that are not possible or very difficult to do with a single satellite. Additionally, the utilization of smaller satellites is maximized within formations and clusters to conduct missions such as interferometry and earth-sensing. This paper presents a methodology to describe, populate and analyze numerous formation designs employing the use of Hill's equations of motion to describe a formation's dynamics. These equations of motion are then programmed into a MATLAB code to produce Cartesian elements for input into a Satellite Tool Kit(Trademark) (STK) simulation that demonstrates numerous possible cluster formation designs. These simulations are then used to determine delta V requirements for overcoming LEO- type perturbations that were modeled within STK's High Precision Orbit Propagator (HPOP). Finally, components from two subsystems Attitude Determination and Control (ADCS) and Propulsion, using the delta V calculations from the simulation analysis and current advances in MicroElectroMechanical systems (MEMs) and nanosatellite technology, are presented based on a mass constraint of 10kg for the entire satellite
author2 Agrawal, Brij N.
author_facet Agrawal, Brij N.
Tomlin, Stephen D.
author Tomlin, Stephen D.
spellingShingle Tomlin, Stephen D.
Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
author_sort Tomlin, Stephen D.
title Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
title_short Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
title_full Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
title_fullStr Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
title_full_unstemmed Remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
title_sort remote nanosatellite formation designs with orbit perturbation corrections and attitude control/propulsion subsystem correlation
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/7781
work_keys_str_mv AT tomlinstephend remotenanosatelliteformationdesignswithorbitperturbationcorrectionsandattitudecontrolpropulsionsubsystemcorrelation
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