DocumentCode :
3205607
Title :
Estimating the center of mass of a free-floating body in microgravity
Author :
Lejeune, L. ; Casellato, C. ; Pattyn, N. ; Neyt, X. ; Migeotte, P.-F.
Author_Institution :
Vital Signs & Performance (VIPER) Res. Unit, R. Mil. Acad., Brussels, Belgium
fYear :
2013
fDate :
3-7 July 2013
Firstpage :
4919
Lastpage :
4922
Abstract :
This paper addresses the issue of estimating the position of the center of mass (CoM) of a free-floating object of unknown mass distribution in microgravity using a stereoscopic imaging system. The method presented here is applied to an object of known mass distribution for validation purposes. In the context of a study of 3-dimensional ballistocardiography in microgravity, and the elaboration of a physical model of the cardiovascular adaptation to weightlessness, the hypothesis that the fluid shift towards the head of astronauts induces a significant shift of their CoM needs to be tested. The experiments were conducted during the 57th parabolic flight campaign of the European Space Agency (ESA). At the beginning of the microgravity phase, the object was given an initial translational and rotational velocity. A 3D point cloud corresponding to the object was then generated, to which a motion-based method inspired by rigid body physics was applied. Through simulations, the effects of the centroid-to-CoM distance and the number of frames of the sequence are investigated. In experimental conditions, considering the important residual accelerations of the airplane during the microgravity phases, CoM estimation errors (16 to 76mm) were consistent with simulations. Overall, our results suggest that the method has a good potential for its later generalization to a free-floating human body in a weightless environment.
Keywords :
aerospace biophysics; biological fluid dynamics; biomedical optical imaging; cardiovascular system; physiological models; stereo image processing; zero gravity experiments; 3-dimensional ballistocardiography; 3D point cloud; CoM estimation error; European Space Agency; cardiovascular adaptation; center of mass position; centroid-to-CoM distance; fluid shifting; frame number sequence; free-floating human body; microgravity phase; motion-based method; parabolic flight campaign; physical model; residual acceleration; rigid body physics; rotational velocity; stereoscopic imaging system; translational velocity; unknown mass distribution; weightless environment; Acceleration; Airplanes; Cameras; Estimation; Geometry; Inverse problems; Noise;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2013 35th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Osaka
ISSN :
1557-170X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2013.6610651
Filename :
6610651
Link To Document :
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