Title :
An attitude determination and control system of the ALSAT-1 first Algerian microsatellite
Author :
Mohammed, Arezki Mohammed Si
Author_Institution :
Lab. Instrum. Spatiale, Centre Nat. des Techniques Spatiales, Oran, Algeria
Abstract :
ALSAT-1 is a low-cost Algerian microsatellite build by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. (SSTL), it is designed to be part of a five microsatellites constellation for daily disaster monitoring. The microsatellite uses a Y momentum and Z reaction wheels, 3-axis magnetorquer rods and a single butane gas thruster for orbital maintenance. The magnetorquer rods do momentum maintenance and nutation damping f or Y/Z wheels and, libration damping and yaw phase control. The attitude sensor used, is a 3-axis fluxgate magnetometer and a sun sensor. Precise orbital knowledge will be obtained using an antenna GPS receiver supported by an on-board orbit estimator. This paper describes the various attitude control modes required to support: (1) initial attitude acquisition phase, (2) imager nadir pointing attitude controller. The specific attitude controllers and estimators used during theses modes are explained. Simulation and in-orbit commissioning results are presented to evaluate the performance and design objectives.
Keywords :
Global Positioning System; aerospace control; aerospace simulation; artificial satellites; attitude control; attitude measurement; 3-axis fluxgate magnetometer; 3-axis magnetorquer rod; ALSAT-1; SSTL; Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd; Z reaction wheel; antenna GPS receiver; attitude control modes; attitude controller; attitude determination; attitude estimators; attitude sensor; butane gas thruster; control system; daily disaster monitoring; first Algerian microsatellite; imager nadir pointing attitude controller; initial attitude acquisition phase; inorbit commissioning; libration damping; magnetorquer rod; microsatellites constellation; nutation damping; orbital maintenance; sun sensor; yaw phase control; Attitude control; Control systems; Damping; Magnetic moments; Magnetic sensors; Monitoring; Phase control; Position measurement; Satellites; Wheels;
Conference_Titel :
Recent Advances in Space Technologies, 2003. RAST '03. International Conference on. Proceedings of
Conference_Location :
Istanbul, Turkey
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8142-4
DOI :
10.1109/RAST.2003.1303902