Abstract

The natural property of a three-axis attitude stabilized spacecraft is investigated by simplifying it as a rigid central body jointed with 4 solar panels in this paper. For the spacecraft composed of a rigid central body and flexible panels, the Rayleigh-Ritz method is employed to obtain global modes which are explicitly functions of space coordinates and are useful for the modeling of lower-order discrete dynamic equations and design of active vibration controllers for the system. The Gram-Schmidt process is used to construct a set of characteristic orthogonal polynomials as the displacement field of the solar panel. Lagrange multipliers are introduced to describe the constraint at joints. The characteristic equation of the whole system is derived through the Rayleigh-Ritz procedure. Then, natural frequencies and corresponding global modes of the spacecraft with jointed panels are obtained. Taking the natural frequency obtained from the finite element method as a reference value, the process of getting natural frequencies is validated by comparing results obtained with those from the finite element method. Moreover, an excellent convergence and high accuracy of the present method is demonstrated by a very good agreement between results from ANSYS and theoretical method proposed here. Finally, parametric studies on characteristics of the spacecraft are conducted. The interesting mode shift phenomenon is observed when parameters of the spacecraft are changed.

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