Tilted wheel satellite attitude control with air-bearing table experimental results
Gyroscopic actuators for satellite control have attracted significant research interest over the years, but their viability for the control of small satellites has only recently started to become clear. Research on variable speed gyroscopic actuators has long been focused on single gimbal actuators;...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta astronautica 2015-12, Vol.117, p.414-429 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gyroscopic actuators for satellite control have attracted significant research interest over the years, but their viability for the control of small satellites has only recently started to become clear. Research on variable speed gyroscopic actuators has long been focused on single gimbal actuators; double gimbal actuators typically operate at constant wheel spin rate and allow tilt angle ranges far larger than the ranges needed to operate most satellite missions. This research examines a tilted wheel, a newly proposed type of inertial actuator that can generate torques in all three principal axes of a rigid satellite using a spinning wheel and a double tilt mechanism. The tilt mechanism tilts the angular momentum vector about two axes providing two degree of freedom control, while variation of the wheel speed provides the third. The equations of motion of the system lead to a singularity-free system during nominal operation avoiding the need for complex steering logic. This paper describes the hardware design of the tilted wheel and the experimental setup behind both standalone and spherical air-bearing tables used to test it. Experimental results from the air bearing table are provided with the results depicting the high performance capabilities of the proposed actuator in torque generation.
•New inertial actuator capable of 3-DoF torque generation using spinning wheel.•High torque capability with low power consumption and singularity-free operation.•Demonstrated with repeatable experimental results on an air-bearing testbed.•Performance comparison with different types of conventional CMG systems. |
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ISSN: | 0094-5765 1879-2030 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.actaastro.2015.09.007 |