Abstract

Random vibration excitation is a standard method for obtaining the dynamic properties of aerospace structures and simulating loading conditions. Shaker-based random excitation and traditional finite element analysis techniques use random vibrations, assuming a Gaussian distribution of excitation impulse magnitudes. While Gaussian signals may sufficiently describe some vibrational environments, many real-world excitations have non-Gaussian distributions. These signals may contain vibrational impulses larger than those observed in a Gaussian signal and could cause damage if not considered. This paper examines the influence of non-Gaussian signals on flexible vs. rigid robotic architectures using NASA JPL’s Pop-Up Flat Folding Explorer Robot (PUFFER) and Cooperative Autonomous Distributed Robotic Explorer (CADRE). The results indicate that flexible systems can be significantly impacted by a non-Gaussian excitation profile and that neither a typical enveloping of a Gaussian excitation nor a superposition of the responses to a worst-case impulse load with the response to a Gaussian signal was sufficient to bound the response due to non-Gaussian excitation. The driving mechanism for increased sensitivity of flexible robotic systems appears to be inertial, and designers may consider shifting the relative flexibility of the system or its constraints to force particular deformation modes or designing hinge mechanisms with increased damping to minimize the influence of non-Gaussian signals on the response of a flexible robotic structure.

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