DocumentCode :
2817850
Title :
Attitude determination and control for the new millennium EO-1 spacecraft
Author :
Speer, Dave ; Sanneman, Paul
Author_Institution :
Litton Amecom/Space Syst. Oper., College Park, MD, USA
Volume :
1
fYear :
1998
fDate :
21-28 Mar 1998
Firstpage :
93
Abstract :
The Earth Orbiter 1 (EO-1) mission is the first in a series of smaller, faster, cheaper Earth observing spacecraft that will be developed through Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) under NASA´s New Millennium Program (NMP). In a broad sense, the mission objectives focus on the development and flight testing of new remote sensing spacecraft and operations technologies that could be applied to 21st century NASA missions. A major goal for EO-1 is flight validation of the Advanced Land Imager (ALI), a Landsat-type hyper-spectral Earth science instrument being built by the MIT Lincoln Laboratory. The pointing and stability requirements for this “push-broom” imaging instrument are the main drivers of attitude control performance. The EO-1 Attitude Control Subsystem (ACS) is three-axis stabilized with on-axis reaction wheels for control actuation and a hydrazine propulsion system for ΔV capability. Pointing requirements for the roll, pitch, and yaw axes are 0.02°, 0.02°, and 0.01° 2-sigma respectively, and the ACS supports cross-track pointing of ±6.5° about the roll axis. Sub-arcsecond jitter requirements will be met by adjusting the operating profiles of the on-board actuators. There are ACS operating modes for “B-dot” despin following launch vehicle separation, initial sun acquisition, nadir-pointed science data collection, constant slew rate lunar and solar inertial calibrations, and ΔV manoeuvres for orbit adjustments and close formation flight
Keywords :
attitude control; inertial systems; space vehicles; tracking; Advanced Land Imager; EO-1 spacecraft; Earth Orbiter 1 mission; Goddard Space Flight Center; Landsat-type hyper-spectral Earth science instrument; NASA; New Millennium Program; attitude control; close formation flight; constant slew rate inertial calibrations; control actuation; cross-track pointing; hydrazine propulsion system; initial sun acquisition; launch vehicle separation; nadir-pointed science data collection; on-axis reaction wheels; operating profiles; orbit adjustments; push-broom” imaging instrument; remote sensing spacecraft; Earth; Instruments; NASA; Position measurement; Remote sensing; Satellites; Space missions; Space technology; Space vehicles; Testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 1998 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Snowmass at Aspen, CO
ISSN :
1095-323X
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4311-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.1998.686809
Filename :
686809
Link To Document :
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