The current invention relates to satellite control. More particularly, the invention relates to geosynchronous station keeping inclination vector target cycles and continuous and quasi-continuous control programs.
Managing orbital degradation of geostationary satellites over time is an on-going problem. Because of various external forces, such as forces exerted by the sun and the moon, it is necessary correct this degradation, where it is a goal to extend the lifetime of satellites to a maximum span. Because the lifetime of a satellite depends upon how long its supply of fuel lasts, any saved fuel may be used to extend the life of the satellite. Alternatively, the saved fuel can be removed from the satellite, thereby reducing the overall launch mass of the satellite, allowing more payload to be added to the satellite.
What is needed is a way to provide design and implementation of inclination control strategies, which target optimal minimum fuel target cycles using continuously or quasi-continuously firing thrusters in satellites.
To address the needs in the art, a satellite inclination control method is provided. The method includes tracking optimal inclination vector control cycles for a satellite in near geosynchronous orbit, using control rates disposed to counter inclination growth of the satellite, where the control rates include continuously or quasi-continuously firings of a thruster, and where the control rates are disposed to provide convergence to the optimal inclination vector control cycles in the presence of variances in orbit determination, maneuver implementation and orbit propagation modeling errors.
According to one aspect of the invention, the thruster firings include stationary plasma thrusters (SPT), xenon ion propulsion systems (XIP), or chemical thrusters.
In another aspect of the invention, the control is disposed to counter a given fraction of a secular perturbation of inclination due to a mean annual drive of Saros and Triple Saros perturbations.
According to a further aspect of the invention, the control is disposed to counter a given fraction of periodic biannual solar perturbations of inclination.
In one aspect of the invention, a combined control compensation is applied to control given fractions of both a secular Saros perturbation and the cyclic biannual perturbation, wherein the secular Saros perturbation comprises an 18-year Saros perturbation and a 54-year Saros perturbation, and the cyclic biannual perturbation comprises a 6-month biannual perturbation.
In yet another aspect of the invention, the continuous control is applied to control an osculating inclination vector to converge in mean to a desired inclination vector target locus.
According to one aspect of the invention, the inclination control includes an acquisition control and a maintenance control, where the acquisition control and a maintenance control are iteratively applied.
In one aspect of the invention, the quasi-continuous control is disposed to ensure an osculating inclination vector of the satellite is centered on an ideal continuously controlled osculating trajectory between episodic inclination maneuver deltas. Here, according to one aspect, the quasi-continuous control is a closed loop feedback control, where a maneuvering delta is determined over a first interval, and where only a solution over a sub-interval of the first interval is retained for a quasi-continuous intra-maneuvering trajectory, where maneuvering times need not be equi-spaced nor frequently spaced.
The current invention provides a method of geosynchronous station keeping inclination vector target cycles and continuous and quasi-continuous control programs for tracking them either with low thrust, high specific impulse ion thrusters such as SPTs or XIPs, or with high thrust, moderate specific impulse chemical thrusters.
For the same ΔV, ion thrusters must be fired for a much longer duration than chemical thrusters. That duration may include several shorter firings, however, due either to electric power limitations or the desire to limit long-arc ΔV losses, or both. Thus, there may be one or more small-ΔV ion thruster firings each day over several days in order to exert inclination vector station keeping control. The net effect of the quasi-continuous episodic inclination deltas from each firing may be modeled as a continuous inclination vector control rate. Conversely, an optimal continuous control rate program may be implemented by quasi-continuous impulsive inclination deltas, even for large impulsive deltas separated by many orbital revs.
The current invention provides a method of inclination control strategies, which target optimal minimum fuel target cycles using continuously or quasi-continuously firing thrusters. By ensuring that only control rates or deltas, which counter secular inclination are applied, the controls achieve optimal ΔV performance in the presence of orbit determination, maneuver implementation, and orbit propagation modeling errors.
Inclination trajectories are denote by
the true of date non-singular inclination vector elements of a geosynchronous vehicle at julian day, t, from julian epoch J2000. Here iε[−180, +180] deg is the orbit inclination, and Ω is the right ascension of the orbit ascending node. Clearly, (r, θ)=(2 tan(i/2), Ω) are the polar coordinates of the cartesian point (p, q), and like all polar coordinates, are singular at the origin, (p, q)=(0, 0). The origin, of course, defines geostationary inclination and so plays a central role in geosynchronous operations. For this reason only non-singular inclination elements, [p, q], are used in this discussion.
The time evolution of near-geosynchronous inclination is due to the nutation and precession of the orbital angular momentum vector in the presence of oblate earth, lunar, and solar gravitational torques. There are five principal periodic signatures, representative values for the period and amplitude of which are listed in Table 1. On the scale of geosynchronous inclination station keeping tolerances, the amplitude of the diurnal cycle is negligible and will be ignored in this discussion. At the other extreme, the period and amplitude of the Saros and triple Saros cycles are so large as to appear as secular perturbations requiring control.
The i=[p q] perturbation dynamics in the neighborhood of the origin are given by
Perturbation coefficient matrices, A, B, and C, acting on basis function vectors φ, ψ, and χ, depending on right ascension of the moon, tα(t), right ascension of the sun, t
β(t), and right ascension of the ascending node of the moon's orbit in the ecliptic, t
γ(t), characterize the biweekly lunar, biannual solar, and long term quasi-secular Saros cycle lunar perturbations, respectively. The design of the control function, δ( ), is the one aspect of the current invention. The right hand side matrix and vector perturbation elements are defined by
for the biweekly lunar terms;
for the biannual solar terms; and
for the dominant Saros cycle terms. Values for the elements of coefficient matrices A, B, and C may be found in the literature. Expressions for computing the lunar arguments α and γ, and the solar argument, β, are also found in the literature. î, defines the mean inclination vector. The secular Saros perturbation components corresponding to C are the mean annual drive. As shown in
As indicated above, the two control strategies we consider are:
For continuous inclination control, given the initial value problem,
the object of continuous station keeping inclination control is to design control function, tδ, such that the osculating trajectory, t
i, acquires a desired mean inclination target locus t
j in the [p, q] plane and then maintains that target locus. The current invention provides such control functions for the maximum compensation and minimum fuel target loci, a point and a circle, respectively.
Since the uncontrolled i dynamics are independent of i, we have that the difference
i2(t)−i1(t)=i2(t0)−i1(t0),
of two uncontrolled trajectories is constant, so that trajectories starting from different initial vectors are congruent rigid body translations of one another. Thus given, target locus tj, the acquisition control
removes any station keeping mean initialization error, î(t0)−j(t0), over a T day acquisition phase. Here î is the mean inclination corresponding to osculating inclination i. The osculating trajectory converges in mean to the mean target locus over T days.
Underlying the initial acquisition phase is persistent maintenance in mean of the target locus. The maintenance control is given by
δm(t;ζ)=−[ζBψ(β)+Cχ(γ)] for tε[t0,∞],
where ζ=1 for the maximum compensation strategy and ζ=0 for the minimum fuel strategy.
The complete acquisition plus maintenance control program is
δ(t;t0,T,ζ)=δα(t;t0,T)+δm(t;ζ).
An important attribute of this invention is that a continuous control program is applied to the osculating inclination trajectory to achieve convergence in mean to a mean inclination target locus.
In practice, the maintenance phase does not run open loop in the open-ended interval [t0, 1). Instead, episodic orbit determination corrects the propagated i(tk) at OD epochs tk, k=0, 1, 2, . . . . The initial value problem is then re-solved in interval [tk, 1), and the re-acquisition control automatically removes any orbit propagation abutment error revealed by orbit determination over the previous station keeping control cycle [tk−1, tk]. The algorithm is thus self-correcting on the time scale of the station keeping control cycle. And neither is the control program continuous in practice. The ideal continuous control program serves as the osculating target for the quasi-continuous discrete control program to be implemented by the vehicle.
Continuous inclination control is not practical in on-station operations for most spacecraft designs since it would preclude the usual 1 rev/day pitch rotation to maintain nadir-pointing payload, where, the continuous control program is very nearly constant in magnitude and inertial direction over one orbital day. Instead, the continuous control program is replaced by episodic inclination deltas. There may be one or more deltas per day (e.g., 4 maneuvers per 1 day with ion plasma thruster station keeping) or one or more days per delta (e.g., 1 maneuver every 14 days for traditional chemical thruster station keeping).
The quasi-continuous control program ensures that the vehicle's osculating inclination trajectory, th, is centered on the ideal continuously controlled osculating trajectory, t
i, between episodic inclination maneuver deltas, Δhj at times tj, j=1, . . . . The deltas are given by
Δhj=i(tj+1)−h(tj+1),
where th satisfies the series of uncontrolled initial value problems,
Observe that this is a closed loop feedback control in that determining the maneuver delta at time requires propagation of the uncontrolled trajectory over the interval [tj−1 tj+1]. Only the solution over the interval [tj−1 tj] is retained for the quasi-continuous intra-maneuver trajectory. The maneuver times, tj, need not be equi-spaced, and neither need they be frequently spaced.
The fuel use for continuous inclination control is proportional to the net continuous inclination authority, I,
I(t0,T,ζ)=∫tδ(s;t0,T,ζ)ds.
The quasi-continuous control authority, J, is the sum of the inclination deltas,
supplied by the quasi-continuous controls, Δhj with maneuver frequency, 1/dT. The more frequent are the maneuvers, the smaller is each maneuver. The net inclination authority, however, remains virtually constant for each strategy, independent of maneuver frequency. That is,
for fixed strategy, ζ. The quasi-continuous control authority ratio for maneuver frequency, 1/dT, using strategy ζ is
The implementation defined in this description has the property that fq(dT, ζ)<1 for 0<dT; the savings are essentially the discretization error of the quasi-continuous approximation to the continuous control: the discrete control “cuts corners” relative to the continuous control. The fuel savings of min fuel relative to max comp are characterized by
Table 2 summarizes the performance of the continuous and quasi-continuous controls for the four example scenarios of the previous section.
This invention provides the design and implementation of inclination control strategies, which target optimal minimum fuel target cycles using continuously or quasi-continuously firing thrusters. By ensuring that only control rates or deltas, which counter secular inclination are applied, the controls achieve optimal ΔV performance in the presence of orbit determination, maneuver implementation, and orbit propagation modeling errors.
The present invention has now been described in accordance with several exemplary embodiments, which are intended to be illustrative in all aspects, rather than restrictive. Thus, the present invention is capable of many variations in detailed implementation, which may be derived from the description contained herein by a person of ordinary skill in the art. For example, the control applications may be episodic with arbitrary or irregular period. The reference trajectory may be corrected or re-defined during any cycle based on the results of routine orbit determination or following orbit adjustments for purposes other than station keeping.
All such variations are considered to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3866025 | Cavanagh | Feb 1975 | A |
4084772 | Muhlfelder | Apr 1978 | A |
4825646 | Challoner et al. | May 1989 | A |
5810295 | Anzel | Sep 1998 | A |
5813633 | Anzel | Sep 1998 | A |
6032904 | Hosick et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6089507 | Parvez et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6637701 | Glogowski et al. | Oct 2003 | B1 |
7720604 | Cichan et al. | May 2010 | B1 |
7918420 | Ho | Apr 2011 | B2 |
20080105788 | Anzel et al. | May 2008 | A1 |
20090020650 | Ho | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20090078829 | Ho et al. | Mar 2009 | A1 |
20110144835 | Ho | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20120097797 | Woo et al. | Apr 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120181387 A1 | Jul 2012 | US |