This is really neat and they got it to work. This gives us a low energy cost alternative
to the established procedures and will certainly expand mission parameters on a
lot of craft.
Needless to say, orbital work has been progressively improving over the
decades and here we have another important energy saver.
Bravo for a nice piece of work.
TRACE Spacecraft's New Slewing
Procedure
by Lori
Keesey
The fastest path between Point A and Point B is a straight line. Not so fast, says a teamof scientists and engineers who recently disproved this commonly accepted notion using a NASA satellite that had not moved more than 15 degrees during its 12-year mission studying the Sun.
In what may seem
counterintuitive even to engineers, a team from the Naval Postgraduate School
(NPS) in Monterey, Calif., Draper Laboratory in Houston, Texas, and the NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., proved that the spacecraft
actually rotated faster to reach a particular target in the sky when it carried
out a set of mathematically calculated movements.
These maneuvers looked
more like the steps dancers would perform doing the tango, the foxtrot, or
another ballroom dance.
"That spacecraft
was dancing on the sky," said Osvaldo Cuevas, the mission director of
NASA's Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE), the spacecraft that
carried the experiment before NASA decommissioned it in September. Had TRACE
sported a pair of legs, its steps would have traced roughly the pattern of a
five-point star.
Until the spacecraft's
debut on NASA's version of "Dancing with the Stars," TRACE stared
steadily at the Sun producing millions of images of the corona, the Sun's outer
atmosphere that extends millions of kilometers into space and is nearly 200
times hotter than the Sun's visible surface.
Benefits to Current and Future Missions
The team's first-ever time-optimal slew experiment was more than just an interesting performance or a theoretical question posed in a technical journal.
The team's findings
are particularly relevant to engineers designing futureEarth-observing, astrophysics, and reconnaissance
satellites that must image one object and then quickly reorient itself to
observe another in a completely different location. Just as important, the
experiment showed that existing spacecraft can "do things that they aren't
designed to do," said Nazreth Bedrossian, a Draper scientist who played a
pivotal role in the experiment.
"The payoff is in
the pointing agility and being able to collect more science," explained Neil Dennehy, a Goddard engineer
with the NASA Engineering and Safety
Center (NESC). "NASA
will benefit and so will industry." Currently, NASA engineers direct
spacecraft to follow a straight line when slewing to different locations in the
sky. While it may be the shortest path, it is not the fastest, as the
experiment showed.
Although the findings
might surprise some, they did not astonish scientists from NPS and Draper.
Actually the discovery that a straight line is not the fastest path between two
points was made in the early 1700s by Swiss mathematician Johann Bernoulli. He
discovered that a sliding bead traveling from one point to another would move
faster if it followed a curved line and allowed gravity to assist in the
acceleration.
The challenge then was
not whether it was faster moving along a non-linear path, but rather what that
path might look like. "Over the years, we forgot that the straight line
isn't the best solution because we didn't know how to calculate the fastest
path. We didn't have the tools," said Mark Karpenko, an NPS research
scientist and lead engineer in the experiment.
Similar Movements Demonstrated on Space Station
It was a conundrum that NPS Professor Michael Ross eventually solved when he and his colleagues developed an optimal-control software package, called "DIDO," named for the ancient queen of
In fact, Ross,
Bedrossian, and his colleague, Sagar Bhatt, used DIDO four years earlier to maneuver
the International Space Station 180 degrees without expending a drop of fuel.
"We became known
as the people who can take this kind of an idea and make it fly," Ross
said. "What needs to be emphasized is that the software used for
solving the Space Station and TRACE maneuvers is
exactly the same. Although the Space Station experiment demonstrated a minimum-fuel maneuver and
TRACE a minimum-time maneuver - maneuvers that are quite different - the
mathematics are similar."
All they needed was a
chance to demonstrate DIDO's prowess by carrying out time-optimal maneuvers on
a real satellite.
The stars had aligned
in their favor. In the spring, NESC's Dennehy and Senior Engineer Kenneth
Lebsock learned that the Space Science Mission
Operations Office (SSMO) at Goddard planned to decommission TRACE in September.
Before doing so, SSMO management offered experimenters an opportunity to use
the spacecraft as an orbital testbed to investigate new ideas.
"I talked with
the people who worked on TRACE's design, and I asked them what they would like
to do if they could it all over again," Lebsock recalled. "The guys
thought it would be neat if we could uplink maneuvering commands to see if
TRACE could carry out an optimal slew" - a job the spacecraft was never
designed to do, let alone quickly.
Two-Month Turnaround
NESC knew whom to call. Usually it takes at least a year to develop a solution, Ross said. The team, however, had only two months to complete the job. "I called up Naz (Bedrossian) and I said, 'I know you made it happen with the space station. Do you think you can make it happen this time?'"
The answer was
obvious, Bedrossian said. "When do you get an opportunity to test your
ideas on an actual satellite? For engineers, a flight test is like the
Olympics. It's what you train for."
While Bernouilli
calculated the optimum path using gravity to its best advantage, the team had
to solve a pattern that exploited the spacecraft'smass and its four reaction wheels - a type of
flywheel device that rotates spacecraft by very small amounts to keep it
pointed at a star.
"We have been
working on time-optimal maneuvers for other types of spacecraft, but never a
reaction wheel system," Karpenko said.
Had the team opted to
take TRACE in a straight line from one point to another, for example, it would
have had to push one of the wheels to full saturation, with the other three not
working as hard, Lebsock explained.
That means the
spacecraft could not go any faster than the speed of the one wheel. The quest
then was to determine mathematically the most efficient pattern where all four
wheels worked equally hard.
By Aug. 10, the team
was ready to begin the first of its 20 tests. Goddard engineers uploaded the
team's series of pointing commands, starting conservatively with a 10-degree
slew and then back to the starting position. By the fourth week, TRACE had
slewed over 90 degrees off the Sun line. It maintained that position for about
six minutes before slewing back.
"That maneuver
was interesting because it really demonstrated what we wanted to show,"
Karpenko said. "We can actually reorient the spacecraft more quickly than
by using the conventional techniques."
"This was about
taking a risk to find something and learn something new," Cuevas added.
"Not only were the movements faster than standard maneuvers, they also
consumed less than half the electrical power of a standard movement. This could
translate into significant savings for NASA, to say nothing of the improved
data collection."
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