R-bar refers to the local vertical axis pointing radially upward in a satellite-fixed reference frame. Approaching a satellite along the R-bar, especially for rendezvous and docking to geostationary satellites, is advantageous in terms of safety considerations and flight time compared to other options. In this paper, a specialized study on autonomous R-bar proximity operations with respect to a geostationary target from a separation of several kilometers to a few hundreds of meters, commonly referred to as the closing phase, is carried out and a comprehensive solution for both attitude and orbit control in this scenario is proposed. An integrative design of the guidance, navigation, and control for R-bar proximity operations is presented. Impulsive R-bar hopping maneuvers are developed for the trajectory guidance. This method is shown to be passively safe and time efficient. The onboard sensors provide measurements of the line-of-sight, range to the target, attitude and angular velocity in the inertial frame. Due to the sensitivity of the sensor’s pointing in the far-range phase, a sliding mode attitude control law is introduced to align the optical axis with the line-of-sight to the target. Sensor measurements are fused and processed by an extended Kalman filter. Simulation results indicate that the proposed integrative guidance, navigation, and control algorithms are robust to uncertainties and noise, and can be used as a comprehensive solution for R-bar rendezvous and docking mission design during the closing phase.


    Access

    Check access

    Check availability in my library

    Order at Subito €


    Export, share and cite



    Title :

    Guidance, navigation and control for autonomous R-bar proximity operations for geostationary satellites


    Contributors:


    Publication date :

    2017-03-01


    Size :

    22 pages




    Type of media :

    Article (Journal)


    Type of material :

    Electronic Resource


    Language :

    English