Publication | Closed Access
Flight Results from the HST SM4 Relative Navigation Sensor System
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Citations
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References
2010
Year
EngineeringLocation EstimationGlobal Navigation Satellite SystemField RoboticsImage AnalysisSpace Shuttle AtlantisCalibrationSystems EngineeringComputational ImagingInstrumentationLaunch Pad 39AVision SensorAutomatic NavigationMachine VisionTime-of-flight CameraAircraft NavigationComputer ScienceRange ImagingFlight ResultsUltor Passive PoseAutonomous NavigationComputer VisionSatellite Navigation SystemsAerospace EngineeringImage ProcessorExtended Reality
On May 11, 2009, Space Shuttle Atlantis roared off of Launch Pad 39A enroute to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to undertake its final servicing of HST, Servicing Mission 4. Onboard Atlantis was a small payload called the Relative Navigation Sensor experiment, which included three cameras of varying focal ranges, avionics to record images and estimate, in real time, the relative position and attitude (aka pose) of the telescope during rendezvous and deploy. The avionics package, known as SpaceCube and developed at the Goddard Space Flight Center, performed image processing using field programmable gate arrays to accelerate this process, and in addition executed two different pose algorithms in parallel, the Goddard Natural Feature Image Recognition and the ULTOR Passive Pose and Position Engine (P3E) algorithms
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