surface constraints
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2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pengyuan Zhao ◽  
Jinguo Liu ◽  
Chenchen Wu ◽  
Yangmin Li ◽  
Keli Chen

Abstract Space-deployable mechanisms can be used as supporting structures for large-diameter antennas in space engineering. This study proposes a novel method for constructing the surface design of space reflector antennas based on polar scissor units. The concurrency and deployability equations of the space scissor unit with definite surface constraints are derived using the rod and vector methods. Constraint equations of the spatial transformation for space n-edge polar scissor units are summarized. A new closed-loop deployable structure, called the polar scissor deployable antenna (PSDA), is designed by combining planar polar scissor units with spatial polar scissor units. The over-constrained problem is solved by releasing the curve constraint that locates at the end-point of the planar scissor mechanism. Kinematics simulation and error analysis are performed. The results show that the PSDA can effectively fit the paraboloid of revolution. Finally, deployment experiments verify the validity and feasibility of the proposed design method, which provides a new idea for the construction of large space-reflector antennas.


2020 ◽  
Vol 526 ◽  
pp. 146743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ambika Bawa ◽  
Amit Choudhary ◽  
Gunjan Sharma ◽  
Rajesh ◽  
Surinder P. Singh ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
C. L. Glennie ◽  
P. J. Hartzell

Abstract. A number of low-cost, small form factor, high resolution lidar sensors have recently been commercialized in an effort to fill the growing needs for lidar sensors on autonomous vehicles. These lidar sensors often report performance as range precision and angular accuracy, which are insufficient to characterize the overall quality of the point clouds returned by these sensors. Herein, a detailed geometric accuracy analysis of two representative autonomous sensors, the Ouster OSI-64 and the Livox Mid-40, is presented. The scanners were analyzed through a rigorous least squares adjustment of data from the two sensors using planar surface constraints. The analysis attempts to elucidate the overall point cloud accuracy and presence of systematic errors for the sensors over medium (< 40 m) ranges. The Livox Mid-40 sensor performance appears to be in conformance with the product specifications, with a ranging accuracy of approximately 2 cm. No significant systematic geometric errors were found in the acquired Mid-40 point clouds. The Ouster OSI-64 did not perform to the manufacturer specifications, with a ranging accuracy of 5.6 cm, which is nearly twice that stated by the manufacturer. Several of the individual lasers within the OSI-64’s bank of 64 lasers exhibited higher range noise than their counterparts, and examination of the residuals indicate a possible systematic error correlated with the horizontal encoder angle. This suggests that the Ouster laser may benefit from additional geometric calibration. Finally, both sensors suffered from an inability to accurately resolve edges and smaller features such as posts due to their large laser beam divergences.


Author(s):  
Sebastian Weiss ◽  
Robert Maier ◽  
Daniel Cremers ◽  
Rudiger Westermann ◽  
Nils Thuerey

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarjono Tasi Antoneus ◽  
Feroney Serbini ◽  
Ammar Mohamad Azili ◽  
Muhammad Firdaus Hassan ◽  
Raja Zuhaili Aimran Raja Zainal Raffik ◽  
...  

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