Publication | Closed Access
Comparison of Low-Thrust Control Laws for Applications in Planetocentric Space
24
Citations
7
References
2014
Year
EngineeringHigh-fidelity SimulationSpacecraft Attitude ControlTrajectory PlanningGuidance SystemSystems EngineeringSpace SciencesModeling And SimulationComputer EngineeringFlight OptimizationPropulsionAerospace EngineeringSpacecraft ControlPlanetocentric SpaceSpace Mission DesignSolar Electric PropulsionGuidance AlgorithmSpace TechnologySimulation OptimizationTrajectory OptimizationSpace Engineering
Recent interest at NASA for the application of solar electric propulsion for the transfer of significant payloads in cislunar space has led to the development of high-fidelity simulations of such missions. With such transfers involving transfer times on the order of months, simulation time can be significant. In the past, the examination of such missions typically began with the use of lower-fidelity trajectory optimization tools such as SEPSPOT to develop and tune guidance laws which delivered optimal or near- optimal trajectories, where optimal is generally defined as minimizing propellant expenditure or time of flight. The transfer of these solutions to a high-fidelity simulation is typically an iterative process whereby the initial solution may nearly, but not precisely, meet mission objectives. Further tuning of the guidance algorithm is typically necessary when accounting for high-fidelity perturbations such as those due to more detailed gravity models, secondary-body effects, solar radiation pressure, etc. While trajectory optimization is a useful method for determining optimal performance metrics, algorithms which deliver nearly optimal performance with minimal tuning are an attractive alternative.
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