Thermal deformation determination for payload pointing using space-based beacon

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 7258306
  • Patent Number
    7,258,306
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, September 19, 2006
    18 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, August 21, 2007
    17 years ago
Abstract
A system and associated method for compensating for thermal deformation of a spaced-based structure having a spacecraft payload. The system including a beacon source coupled to a first spacecraft for transmitting a first signal and a beacon sensor coupled to a second spacecraft for receiving the first signal and providing measurement data derived from the first signal. At least one attitude sensing device is coupled to the second spacecraft for determining estimated spacecraft attitude data for the second spacecraft. A processor on the second spacecraft is configured to process ephemeris data of the first and second spacecraft, beacon measurement data, estimated spacecraft attitude data, and gimbal angular position data to estimate spacecraft structural deformation.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates generally to spacecraft attitude determination and control systems, and more specifically to a method and system for determining spacecraft structural thermal deformation using a space-based beacon for accurate spacecraft pointing.


BACKGROUND

Inaccurate pointing of a spacecraft payload can significantly reduce spacecraft effectiveness. For example, inaccurate pointing of a communication antenna can significantly reduce spacecraft communication throughput as well as reduce the communication coverage.


Structural thermal deformation is always a major error contributor to spacecraft payload pointing. Accordingly, to achieve high pointing accuracy, the amount of spacecraft structural thermal deformation needs to be accurately determined and compensated.


As a result, there is a need for achieving high pointing accuracy of a spacecraft by accurately accounting for spacecraft structural thermal deformation.


SUMMARY

A method is disclosed herein for achieving payload pointing accuracy of a spacecraft, such as a communications satellite. The pointing accuracy is achieved by accurately accounting for spacecraft structural thermal deformation. This accuracy is determined by using a spaced-based beacon from another spacecraft. This spaced-based beacon may be a beacon dedicated for use in the present invention. Alternatively, the beacon may have other uses such an RF cross-links or laser cross-links of the two spacecraft.


In one aspect of the invention, a method of determining structural thermal deformation is provided. The method includes the acts of: method of determining structural thermal deformation comprising: determining ephemeris of a first spacecraft and a second spacecraft; receiving a beacon from the second spacecraft at a beacon sensor co-located with a payload of the first spacecraft; determining the direction of the received beacon with respect to the attitude of the first spacecraft; determining the attitude of the first spacecraft using at least one attitude sensor; and calculating a structural thermal deformation between the at least one attitude sensor and the payload using the ephemeris of the first and second spacecraft, the direction of the received beacon, and the attitude of the first spacecraft.


Beneficially, the present invention enables precision attitude control system design that does not rely on any ground-based beacons. This feature is advantageous because a ground-based beacon is not always available for various reasons. In addition, certain spacecraft payloads such as RF and laser cross-link antennas may not be Earth pointed and require space based beacons for pointing references.


By accurately determining structural thermal deformation, the present invention enables the reduction of spacecraft payload pointing error by two to three times.


The scope of the invention is defined by the claims, which are incorporated into this section by reference. A more complete understanding of embodiments of the present invention will be afforded to those skilled in the art, as well as a realization of additional advantages thereof, by a consideration of the following detailed description of one or more embodiments. Reference will be made to the appended sheets of drawings that will first be described briefly.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 illustrates a beacon transmitting spacecraft and a beacon receiving spacecraft in orbit around the Earth.



FIG. 2 is a simplified illustration of the beacon receiving spacecraft in accordance with the present invention.



FIG. 3 is a computational diagram for a calculation of thermal deformation for the beacon receiving spacecraft in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.



FIG. 4 is a flowchart for a calculation of thermal deformation for the beacon receiving spacecraft in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.





Embodiments of the present invention and their advantages are best understood by referring to the detailed description that follows. It should be appreciated that like reference numerals are used to identify like elements illustrated in one or more of the figures.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION

This invention provides a solution for spacecraft structural thermal deformation determination using a space-based beacon to improve spacecraft pointing error. Turning now to the Figures, a first spacecraft 100 and a second spacecraft 102 are shown in orbit in FIG. 1. First spacecraft 100 and second spacecraft 102 can be any type of spacecraft that are capable of being placed in Earth orbiting orbits. As will be described further herein, second spacecraft 102 may correct for thermal deformation that affects pointing of a payload in a specific direction by processing a beacon signal 104 received from first spacecraft 100. First spacecraft 100 and second spacecraft 102 may be, for example, communications satellites with Earth pointing antennas or cross-link antennas, which need to be pointed accurately. The first spacecraft 100 may be a spacecraft that carries only beacon sources, such as a GPS spacecraft.



FIG. 2 is a simplified view of an exemplary spacecraft 200, which represents an embodiment of either first spacecraft 100 or second spacecraft 102. Should spacecraft 200 represent an embodiment of first spacecraft 100, it will include a beacon source 202. Beacon source 202 transmits beacon signal 104, which can be received by second spacecraft 102 (see FIG. 1). Beacon source 202 in spacecraft 200 can be a dedicated signal source specifically used to assist the pointing of the spacecraft. Alternatively, beacon source 202 can be an RF or laser crosslink that is used to establish a communication link between spacecrafts.


Alternatively, should spacecraft 200 represent an embodiment of second spacecraft 102, it will include a beacon sensor 204, a spacecraft payload 206, a processor disposed in spacecraft bus 208, and at least one attitude sensor 210, such as a star tracker. Beacon sensor 204 may be co-located with spacecraft payload 206, or alternatively, beacon sensor 204 may not be required if, for example, spacecraft payload 206 provides the same functionality as beacon sensor 204.


Spacecraft payload 206 may be any payload that requires precise pointing, such as a phased array antenna, a laser communication terminal, and the like. Spacecraft payload 206 is mechanically coupled to spacecraft 200 and is therefore subject to perturbations caused by the thermal deformation of the structural components of spacecraft 200, even though star tracker 210 mounted on spacecraft bus 208 can provide accurate pointing of spacecraft bus 208. It is the structural perturbations between star tracker 210 and spacecraft payload 206 that may cause the pointing accuracy of spacecraft payload 206 to be degraded. The pointing (orientation) of spacecraft payload 206 may be steered by mechanical gimbals. Alternatively, payload 206 may be fixed with respect to spacecraft bus 208.


As will be explained further herein, the accounting for the structural perturbations causing pointing accuracy degradation for payload 206 uses ephemeris of first spacecraft 100 and second spacecraft 102. Ephemeris of first spacecraft 100 and second spacecraft 102 can be uploaded from ground to second spacecraft 102. Alternatively, ephemeris of first spacecraft 100 can be computed by a processor located on-board second spacecraft 102. In addition to the ephemeris just described, the pointing attitude of the second spacecraft 102 as measured by the one to a plurality of attitude sensors 210, such as star trackers and the like, and also the pointing angle of the received beacon 104 with respect to payload 106 are also used to determine the structural thermal deformation. Given the ephemeris of first spacecraft 100 and second spacecraft 102, the pointing angle of received beacon signal 104 with respect to payload 106, and the estimated attitude of second spacecraft 102, the processor on second spacecraft 102 computes direction vectors of beacon signal 104.


As described in detail below, the direction vectors are computed in two representative coordinate frames. The first frame is defined prior to structural thermal deformation. The second frame is defined by including the deformation. In accordance with the present invention, the two direction vectors are used to determine the thermal deformation between star tracker 210 and spacecraft payload 206. Quantifying the thermal deformation in this manner makes it possible to account for and compensate for pointing errors caused by the thermal deformation. The determination of the direction vectors will now be further explained as follows.


A) Direction Vector Determination


The calculation of the direction vectors for received beacon 104 may be better understood with reference to a computational diagram shown in FIG. 3. A direction vector determination 312 for the received beacon 104 depends, in part, upon spacecraft attitude estimates from a spacecraft attitude determination 310 based upon measurements made by the at least one attitude sensor 210. Direction vector determination also depends upon spacecraft ephemeris 306 that includes the ephemeris for the source of beacon 104 at spacecraft 100 and the ephemeris for spacecraft 102. In addition, direction vector determination also depends upon the pointing angle for received beacon 104. In embodiments wherein payload 206 (and hence beacon sensor 204) mounts to spacecraft 102 through payload gimbals 302, the pointing angle for the received beacon 104 will depend upon payload gimbal angles. In addition, the pointing angle will also depend upon beacon sensor measurements 304.


Upon processing this information, it may be shown that the unit beacon vector in inertial reference frame is given as follows:










i




u
^

beacon

=






i




v
^

SC_beacon



-
i




v
^

SC_sensor





i





v
^

SC_beacon



-
i




v
^

SC_sensor










where i{circumflex over (ν)}SCsensor is the position vector of beacon sensor 204 in the inertial frame of reference as computed from spacecraft ephemeris for spacecraft 102, and i{circumflex over (ν)}SCbeacon is the position vector of first spacecraft 100 (and hence the position vector for the source of beacon 104) in the inertial frame of reference as computed from spacecraft ephemeris for first spacecraft 100.


It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill that what is ultimately desired to be determined is the impact of thermal structural deformation on the orientation of payload 206. This impact may be defined with respect to roll (θx), pitch (θy) and yaw (θz) angles with respect to the spacecraft frame of reference as shown in FIG. 2. These angles form a vector {circumflex over (θ)}DEF. The gimbal angles for payload 206 may then be adjusted accordingly to correct for this thermal deformation effect as represented by vector {circumflex over (θ)}DEF. Alternatively, the orientation of spacecraft 102 may be adjusted should payload 106 be rigidly mounted to spacecraft 102 without the use of gimbals.


To derive {circumflex over (θ)}DEF from iûbeacon, it may be shown that these two variables are related as follows:

iûbeacon=CSCi(qSC)TCSCDEFSC({circumflex over (θ)}DEF)TCsensorGIMSCDEF({circumflex over (θ)}ALIGN)TCsensorLOSsensorGIM({circumflex over (θ)}sensorGIM)T sensorLOSûbeacon

where CSCi(qSC) is the direction cosine matrix from inertial frame to spacecraft frame, qSC is the quoterion of spacecraft attitude in inertial frame that is determined by spacecraft attitude determination, CSCDEFSC({circumflex over (θ)}DEF) is the direction cosine matrix from spacecraft frame to the frame after structural deformation,








θ
^

DEF

=

[




θ
x






θ
y






θ
z




]






is the angular vector as just described, CsensorGIMSCDEF({circumflex over (θ)}ALIGN) is the alignment direction cosine matrix of beacon sensor gimbals, {circumflex over (θ)}ALIGN is the known alignment angular vector, CsensorLOSsensorGIM({circumflex over (θ)}sensorGIM) is the direction cosine matrix from sensor gimbals base frame to sensor LOS frame, {circumflex over (θ)}sensorGIM is the gimbals axes rotation vector that is known or is measured by gimbals control subsystem, and sensorLOSûbeacon is the unit beacon vector in sensor LOS frame that is measured by beacon sensor 204.


To solve for {circumflex over (θ)}DEF, the preceding expression for iûbeacon may be rewritten as follows:











[



1



θ
z




-

θ
y







-

θ
z




1



θ
x






θ
y




-

θ
x




1



]




u
^

beacon



SC


=


u
^

beacon



SCDEF





Equation






(
1
)









where SCûbeacon is the unit direction vector for the beacon in the spacecraft 102 frame of reference without thermal deformation, and SCDEFûbeacon is the unit direction vector for the beacon in the spacecraft 102 frame of reference with thermal deformation. The vector SCûbeacon is related to the iûbeacon vector by the following relationship:








u
^

beacon



SC

=




C
SC_i



(

q
SC

)





u
^

beacon



i


=

[




a
1






a
2






a
3




]







whereas the vector SCDEFûbeacon may be determined from the following expression:











u
^

beacon



SCDEF

=





C
sensorGIM_SCDEF



(


θ
^

ALIGN

)


T













C
sensorLOS_sensorGIM



(


θ
^


sensor





GIM


)



T





sensor





LOS





u
^

beacon








=



[




b
1






b
2






b
3




]









where the variables are defined as discussed above. Using these expressions for vectors SCDEFûbeacon and SCûbeacon, equation (1) may be rewritten as:











[



0



-

a
3





a
2






a
3



0



-

a
1







-

a
2





a
1



0



]



[




θ
x






θ
y






θ
z




]


=


[





b
1

-

a
1








b
2

-

a
2








b
3

-

a
3





]

=

[




m
1






m
2






m
3




]






Equation






(
2
)








Equation (2) is the measurement equation of structural thermal deformation. As set forth above, the parameters of this equation are computed from gimbals alignment angles and gimbals axes angles (302), beacon sensor measurements (304), spacecraft positions of first spacecraft 100 and second spacecraft 102 from their respective ephemeris (306), and spacecraft attitude estimates (310). Equation (2) may be simplified to:











H






θ
DEF


=
M






where







H
=

[



0



-

a
3





a
2






a
3



0



-

a
1







-

a
2





a
1



0



]


,

M
=


[




m
1






m
2






m
3




]

.







Equation






(
3
)









By solving Equation (3) for the variable θDEF, the effect of structural thermal deformation of second spacecraft 102 between attitude sensor 210 and beacon sensor 204 (and therefore the spacecraft payload 206) can be determined.


B) Thermal Deformation Update Equation


It will be appreciated that to continuously receive beacon signal 104 may be impossible due to the fact that the payload pointing angle is not fixed and may be steered away from the beacon source from time to time. However, due to regular heating of a geosynchronous satellite by the sun, the thermal deformation is predictable and repeatable over a 24-hour period. Accordingly, the structural thermal deformation of the second spacecraft 102 over time may be modeled and predicted, using, for example, harmonic analysis. The model may be updated based upon periodic updates. Alternatively, the model may be updated using non-periodic updates.


For example, due to the periodic nature of the spacecraft thermal environment in Earth orbit, structural thermal deformation over time can be decomposed into harmonic components in a harmonic equation as follows:







[









x

1

_s




(

k
+
1

)








x

1

_c




(

k
+
1

)













x
N_s



(

k
+
1

)








x
N_c



(

k
+
1

)








y

1

_s




(

k
+
1

)








y

1

_c




(

k
+
1

)













y
N_s



(

k
+
1

)








y
N_c



(

k
+
1

)








z

1

_s




(

k
+
1

)








z

1

_c




(

k
+
1

)













z
N_s



(

k
+
1

)








z
N_c



(

k
+
1

)









]

=


[








c

ω
1





s

ω
1








































































-

s

ω
1






c

ω
1


































































































































































c

ω
N





s

ω
N








































































-

s

ω
N






c

ω
N


















































































c

ω
1





s

ω
1








































































-

s

ω
1






c

ω
1


































































































































































c

ω
N





s

ω
N








































































-

s

ω
N






c

ω
N


















































































c

ω
1





s

ω
1








































































-

s

ω
1






c

ω
1


































































































































































c

ω
N





s

ω
N








































































-

s

ω
N






c

ω
N









]

[









x

1





_s


(
k




)







x

1





_c


(
k




)












x
N_s



(
k
)








x
N_c



(
k
)








y

1





_s




(
k
)








y

1





_c




(
k
)













y
N_s



(
k
)








y
N_c



(
k
)








z

1





_s




(
k
)








z

1





_c




(
k
)













z
N_s



(
k
)








z
N_c



(
k
)









]






where cωi=cos ωiΔt, sωi=sin ωiΔt are the sine and cosine functions of the ith harmonic frequency of the spacecraft orbit period, and


xis, xic, yis, yic, zis, zic are the ith harmonics components of thermal deformation in x-, y-, z-axes as shown in FIG. 2. In this example, the indices k and k+1 represent arbitrary periodic sampling times separated by the sampling period. It will be appreciated, however, that this harmonic analysis may be generalized for non-periodic updates.


Therefore, the structural thermal deformation determination update equation can be represented by:










[





θ
x



(
k
)








θ
y



(
k
)








θ
z



(
k
)





]

=



[







1


1





1


1















































































1


1





1


1















































































1


1





1


1







]










[









x

1





_s


(
k




)







x

1





_c


(
k




)












x
N_s



(
k
)








x
N_c



(
k
)








y

1





_s




(
k
)








y

1





_c




(
k
)













y
N_s



(
k
)








y
N_c



(
k
)








z

1





_s




(
k
)








z

1





_c




(
k
)













z
N_s



(
k
)








z
N_c



(
k
)









]









The harmonic equation and thermal deformation update equation can be written in the following simplified matrix and vector forms:

Vk+1=AVk
θDEFk=CVk

C) Thermal Deformation Estimation Equations


Combining Equation (3) with the preceding harmonic and thermal update equations yields the following estimation equations to determine structural thermal deformation (s406):

{circumflex over (V)}k+1=A{circumflex over (V)}k+G(Mk−HkC{circumflex over (V)}k)
{circumflex over (θ)}DEFk=C{circumflex over (V)}k

where G is the estimation gain matrix. The thermal deformation calculation and model update process may be summarized with respect to a flowchart 400 shown in FIG. 4.


Embodiments described above illustrate but do not limit the invention. It should also be understood that numerous modifications and variations are possible in accordance with the principles of the present invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is defined only by the following claims.

Claims
  • 1. A method of determining structural thermal deformation comprising: determining ephemeris of a first spacecraft and a second spacecraft;receiving a beacon from the first spacecraft at a beacon sensor co-located with a payload of the second spacecraft;determining a direction of the received beacon using the ephemeris of the first and second spacecraft;determining an attitude of the second spacecraft from measurements of at least one attitude sensor; andcalculating a structural thermal deformation between the at least one attitude sensor and the payload using the ephemeris of the first and second spacecraft, the direction of the received beacon, and the attitude of the first spacecraft.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the calculating act comprises calculating a direction vector for the received beacon in a first frame of reference and a second frame of reference, wherein the first frame of reference is defined without the structural thermal deformation and the second frame of reference includes the structural thermal deformation.
  • 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the beacon sensor and the payload comprise the same structure.
  • 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one attitude sensor comprises a star tracker.
  • 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the received beacon comprises an RF signal.
  • 6. The method of claim 1, wherein the received beacon comprises a laser signal.
  • 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the received beacon is received at a first time, the calculation act defining the structural thermal deformation at the first time, the method further comprising: updating a model of the thermal deformation over time based upon the calculated thermal deformation at the first time.
  • 8. The method of claim 7, further comprising: predicting a structural thermal deformation at a second time using the updated model.
RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a divisional application of U.S application Ser. No. 10/929,844, filed Aug. 30, 2004 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,134,630.

US Referenced Citations (3)
Number Name Date Kind
5267167 Glickman Nov 1993 A
6142423 Wehner Nov 2000 A
6216983 Wehner et al. Apr 2001 B1
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20070063106 A1 Mar 2007 US
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 10929844 Aug 2004 US
Child 11533165 US