Frequency Separation Control for Drag free Satellite With Frequency Domain Constraints

Author(s):  
Xiaobin Lian ◽  
Jinxiu Zhang ◽  
Lang Lu ◽  
Jihe Wang ◽  
Lixuan Liu ◽  
...  
Geophysics ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 58 (6) ◽  
pp. 853-862 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Clark Trantham

The objective of this paper is to calculate filters with a minimum uncertainty, the product of filter length and bandwidth. The method is applicable to producing minimum uncertainty filters with time or frequency domain constraints on the filter. The calculus of variations is used to derive the conditions that minimize a filter’s uncertainty. The general solution is a linear combination of Hermite functions, where the Hermite functions are summed from low to high order until the filter’s constraints are met. Filters constrained to have zero amplitude at zero hertz have an uncertainty at least three times greater than expected from the uncertainty principle, and the minimum uncertainty filter is a first derivative Gaussian. For the previous filter, the minimum uncertainty high cut filter is a Gaussian function of frequency, but the minimum uncertainty low cut filter is a linear function of frequency.


1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 635-642
Author(s):  
Suhada Jayasuriya ◽  
Massoud Sobhani

A design methodology is developed for a linear, uncertain, SISO system for maximizing the size of a step disturbance in the presence of hard time domain constraints on system states, control input, output and the bandwidth. It is assumed that the system dynamics can be represented by a combination of structured uncertainty in the low frequencies and unstructured uncertainty in the high frequencies. The design procedure is based on mapping the time domain constraints into an equivalent set of frequency domain constraints which are then used to determine an allowed design region for the nominal loop transfer function in the plane of amplitude-phase. Once such a region is found, classical loop shaping determines a suitable nominal loop transfer function. The pole-zero structure of the compensator is a natural consequence of loop shaping and is not preconceived. An illustrative example demonstrates the trade-off between controller bandwidth, or the cost of feedback, and the tolerable size of step disturbance.


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