Spin stabilization of the ORION satellite using a thruster attitude control system with optimal control considerations
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Authors
Cunningham, Janet L.
Subjects
thesis
satellite
attitude control
spin stabilization
satellite
attitude control
spin stabilization
Advisors
Titus, H.A.
Date of Issue
1989
Date
March 1989
Publisher
Monterey, CA; Naval Postgraduate School
Language
en_US
Abstract
The controlled system is the ORION satellite spinning about its single axis of symmetry. Hydrazine thrusters are used as the control and are modeled by ideal, constant magnitude step functions. The system is normalized and driven from non-zero initial angular velocities of the two axes other than the spin axis to the final condition zero. The control profiles required to do this are determined based on a desired controller duty cycle. Adaption of the duty cycle changes the ratio of the time the thrusters are on (fuel use) and total time to completion of the evolution. A comparison between a single axis and a dual axis controller is presented. Simulation programs for the normalized system using a single axis controller simulation program, with each controller having a duty cycle of no more than 50%, are developed. Operation of the system is optimized using a system cost function. An equation relating the controller duty cycle of the dual system to the fuel/time trade-off parameter of the system cost function is required. A nonlinear feedback control algorithm (function of attitude angle rates) is developed from iterations of the simulation, and a priori knowledge of the form of the control from optimal control theory. This numerical solution will allow system designers to incorporate a closed form state feedback control for minimum fuel/time strategies using the ORION satellite's onboard software
The controlled system is the ORION satellite spinning about its single axis of symmetry. Hydrazine thrusters are used as the control and are modeled by ideal, constant magnitude step functions. The system is normalized and driven from non-zero initial angular velocities of the two axes other than the spin axis to the final condition zero. The control profiles required to do this are determined based on a desired controller duty cycle. Adaption of the duty cycle changes the ratio of the time the thrusters are on (fuel use) and total time to completion of the evolution. A comparison between a single axis and a dual axis controller is presented. Simulation programs for the normalized system using a single axis controller simulation program, with each controller having a duty cycle of no more than 50%, are developed. Operation of the system is optimized using a system cost function. An equation relating the controller duty cycle of the dual system to the fuel/time trade-off parameter of the system cost function is required. A nonlinear feedback control algorithm (function of attitude angle rates) is developed from iterations of the simulation, and a priori knowledge of the form of the control from optimal control theory. This numerical solution will allow system designers to incorporate a closed form state feedback control for minimum fuel/time strategies using the ORION satellite's onboard software.
The controlled system is the ORION satellite spinning about its single axis of symmetry. Hydrazine thrusters are used as the control and are modeled by ideal, constant magnitude step functions. The system is normalized and driven from non-zero initial angular velocities of the two axes other than the spin axis to the final condition zero. The control profiles required to do this are determined based on a desired controller duty cycle. Adaption of the duty cycle changes the ratio of the time the thrusters are on (fuel use) and total time to completion of the evolution. A comparison between a single axis and a dual axis controller is presented. Simulation programs for the normalized system using a single axis controller simulation program, with each controller having a duty cycle of no more than 50%, are developed. Operation of the system is optimized using a system cost function. An equation relating the controller duty cycle of the dual system to the fuel/time trade-off parameter of the system cost function is required. A nonlinear feedback control algorithm (function of attitude angle rates) is developed from iterations of the simulation, and a priori knowledge of the form of the control from optimal control theory. This numerical solution will allow system designers to incorporate a closed form state feedback control for minimum fuel/time strategies using the ORION satellite's onboard software.
Type
Thesis
Description
Series/Report No
Department
Electrical Engineering
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Organization
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
Sponsors
Funding
Format
40 p.;28 cm.
Citation
Distribution Statement
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
