spinning tether
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2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-34
Author(s):  
H. Lu ◽  
C. Wang ◽  
Yu. M. Zabolotnov

The dynamic analysis and motion control of a spinning tether system for an interplanetary mission to Mars is considered. The space system consists of two spacecraft connected by a tether with thrusts to control its movement. The movements of the tether system in the sphere of action of the Earth, on the interplanetary trajectory and in the sphere of action of Mars are consistently analyzed. In near-Earth orbit, the transfer of the system into rotation with the help of jet engines installed on the end spacecrafts is considered. The spin of the system is used to create artificial gravity during the interplanetary flight. The tether system spins in the plane perpendicular to the plane of the orbital motion of the center of mass of the system. To describe spatial motion of the system, a mathematical model is used, in which the tether is represented as a set of material points with viscoelastic unilateral mechanical connections. When calculating the movement of the system, an approach based on the method of spheres of action is used. Spacecrafts are considered as material points. The level of gravity and spin of tether system is controlled by thrusters. The structure of the controller for controlling the angular speed of rotation of the tether system is proposed. The simulation results are presented to confirm the effectiveness of the proposed control algorithm, which provides a given level of artificial gravity for th e interplanetary mission under consideration.


2018 ◽  
Vol 90 (8) ◽  
pp. 1168-1179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongshi Lu ◽  
Li Aijun ◽  
Wang Changqing ◽  
Zabolotnov Michaelovitch Yuriy

Purpose This paper aims to present the impact analysis of payload rendezvous with tethered satellite system and the design of an adaptive sliding mode controller which can deal with mass parameter uncertainty of targeted payload, so that the proposed cislunar transportation scheme with spinning tether system could be extended to a wider and more practical range. Design/methodology/approach In this work, dynamical model is first derived based on Langrangian equations to describe the motion of a spinning tether system in an arbitrary Keplerian orbit, which takes the mass of spacecraft, tether and payload into account. Orbital design and optimal open-loop control for the payload tossed by the spinning tether system are then presented. The real payload rendezvous impact around docking point is also analyzed. Based on reference acceleration trajectory given by optimal theories, a sliding mode controller with saturation functions is designed in the close-loop control of payload tossing stage under initial disturbance caused by actual rendezvous error. To alleviate the influence of inaccurate/unknown payload mass parameters, the adaptive law is designed and integrated into sliding mode controller. Finally, the performance of the proposed controller is evaluated using simulations. Simulation results validate that proposed controller is found effective in driving the spinning tether system to carry payload into desired cislunar transfer orbit and in dealing with payload mass parameter uncertainty in a relatively large range. Findings The results show that unideal rendezvous manoeuvres have significant impact on in-plane motion of spinning tether system, and the proposed adaptive sliding mode controller with saturation functions not only guarantees the stability but also provides good performance and robustness against the parameter and unstructured uncertainties. Originality/value This work addresses the analysis of actual impact on spinning tether system motion when payload is docking with system within tolerated docking window, rather than at the particular ideal docking point, and the robust tracking control of deep-space payload tossing missions with the spinning tether system using the adaptive sliding mode controller dealing with parameter uncertainties. This combination has not been proposed before for tracking control of multivariable spinning tether systems.


2018 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
pp. 383-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xing-wang Gou ◽  
Ai-jun Li ◽  
Hao-chang Tian ◽  
Chang-qing Wang ◽  
Hong-shi Lu

Author(s):  
Hong Shi Lu ◽  
Chang Qing Wang ◽  
Ai Jun Li ◽  
Zabolotnov Yuriy

2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1473-1491 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. C. Lorenzini

This paper presents a novel configuration of a space system which addresses the issue of rendezvous and capture of a spacecraft in a lower (or higher) energy orbit for later injection into a higher (or lower) energy orbit. We first demonstrate that a slender long tether loop in space can maintain its shape while spinning and that the width of its opening depends on the boundary conditions of the loop arms near the center of rotation. Subsequently, we show how the tether loop could be utilized to allow a rendezvous and capture of a spacecraft approaching the loop from a lower (or higher) energy orbit while the natural target area of the loop enables an extended time opportunity for spacecraft capture which is tolerant of errors. We also discuss at the conceptual level a possible device/technique for making a soft contact between the loop and the incoming spacecraft. These results are directly applicable to spinning tether systems for space transportation from low Earth orbit to geotransfer orbit and to escape trajectory or for reentering payloads into the Earth atmosphere (from higher energy orbits) with high Δ V and a predictable reentry trajectory.


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