Abstract

This paper investigates the reconstruction and maintenance of the inner-formation system for an innovative drag-free spacecraft with double spherical test masses in consideration of unknown model uncertainties, external disturbances, and actuator saturation. First, spherical test mass 1 is prescribed as the ‘leader’ of the inner-formation system, which is freely floating in the nearly pure gravitational orbit without any control. The nonlinear relative orbit dynamics of the outer spacecraft and spherical test mass 2 with respect to spherical test mass 1 is deduced and the micro configuration of the inner-formation system is introduced. For the outer spacecraft, the aim is to track the spherical test mass 1 in real-time, such that both the center of masses coincided with each other. For the spherical test mass 2, the goal is tracking the reference trajectory, which is designed as a space circular fly-around spherical test mass 1 based on the Clohessy-Wiltshire equation. The state constraints caused by the limit cavity size are analyzed. Second, to achieve these goals with satisfied performance, an event-triggered adaptive terminal sliding mode tracking control strategy is developed for the inner-formation. The adaptive terminal sliding mode technique is implemented to overcome the model uncertainties and external disturbances and to accomplish the reconstruction process in a finite time. Two kinds of barrier functions are utilized to tackle the state constraints. The relative threshold event-triggered mechanism is embedded to save the computation source onboard, evidently. The simulation results demonstrate the efficacy and superiority of the proposed method.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call