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Regulation of Magnetically Actuated Satellites using Model Predictive Control with Disturbance Modelling

Regulation of Magnetically Actuated Satellites using Model Predictive Control with Disturbance Modelling. Mark Wood ( Ph.D. Student ) Wen-Hua Chen ( Senior Lecturer ) Department of Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering Loughborough University UK w.chen@lboro.ac.uk.

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Regulation of Magnetically Actuated Satellites using Model Predictive Control with Disturbance Modelling

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  1. Regulation of Magnetically Actuated Satellites using Model Predictive Control with Disturbance Modelling Mark Wood (Ph.D. Student) Wen-Hua Chen (Senior Lecturer) Department of Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering Loughborough University UK w.chen@lboro.ac.uk

  2. Outline of the Presentation • Background of the study • Design specifications • Model Predictive Control (MPC) • Disturbance modelling • Simulation and verification • Conclusions

  3. Loughborough University • Guardian University League Table – top ten universities • 1 Oxford • 2 Cambridge • Imperial College London • St. Andrews • University College London • London School of Economics • Edinburgh • Warwick • 9 Loughborough University • Bath • Times The Good University Guide • 12th (2008); 6th (2007) • Loughborough: a small town in Midland of England • First technological university in UK • Ranked in top 15 in last 6 consecutive years • Well known in sport and engineering

  4. European Space Agency’s GOCE mission • The Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) • Measure high-accuracy gravity gradients and provide global models of the Earth's gravity field and of the geoid. • First mission in the European Space Agency’s living planet programme • Will be launched in 2008

  5. Control System Configurations • Low earth orbit drag caused by air • Drag-free systems--Ion thruster Assembly (ITA) • Only X position axis is controlled but Y and Z are not controlled. • Disturbance torques: • Drag: mismatch between CoA and CoM • Propulsion: act line does not necessarily cross the CoM

  6. Magnetic attitude control • 3 axes attitude control • Combined reaction wheels and magnetotorquers. • The wheels maintain the pointing stability and high bandwidth feedback • the magnetotorquers provide only a low-bandwidth means to dump excess momentum. • Fully magnetic attitude control/active 3-axis stabilization • robustness • Reliability • low power consumption • cost-efficiency • Magnetic actuator/magnetotorquer

  7. Control challenges • Limit and variation of the Earth magnetic field with the orbit • No torque/force along the direction of the Earth magnetic field • Inclination of the orbit • Two axes are controllable at any time but all axes are controllable over the orbit M B T

  8. Control challenges (cont.) • Unstable dynamics (pitch axis is unstable, roll and yaw axes are neutral stable) • Almost periodic systems • Not come back to the same location after one orbit • Satellite orbit • Earth rotation • Drift in Y and Z axis • Time-varying systems • Sign of the magnetic field components change with the orbit

  9. Magnetic field (24 hours)

  10. Satellite attitude dynamics • State variables: Roll, pitch, yaw angle and their rates • Magnetotorquer dipole moments • Two Possible approaches for control design: Torque or magnetotorquer moments as input

  11. Existing approaches • Industrial design PD controller to generate required torque ; then project it perpendicular to the magnetic field Real torque is different from the required torque • (almost) Periodic LQ controller design (Psiaki, 2001) • Nonlinear magnetic attitude control (Wisniewski and Blanke, 1999; Lovera and Astolfi, 2004,2005; Silani and Lovera, 2005)

  12. Motivation for MPC approaches • Use the information of the orbit and its magnetic field: not only the current location but the future location • Deal with structure constraints– lack of controllability on one axis • Possible for control magnitude constraints

  13. MPC with Attitude control Convert to time-invariant systems where the control input is the torque Time varying system is replaced by time-varyingconstraints on the control input

  14. MPC with on-line optimisation Model prediction , Performance index Constraints Structure and magnitude constraints on control

  15. Air density time history

  16. Disturbance Modelling Constant disturbance Kalman filtering Periodic disturbance

  17. Environmental Torques Aerodynamic, Thruster, Gravity Gradient Control Torque Predictive Controller Satellite Dynamics Estimated pointing, angular rate and external disturbance Star Sensor and Accelerometer Kalman Filter Measured angle Control configuration Modified MPC algorithms with disturbance terms

  18. GOCE Test Bench • Supplied by the European Space Agency • Updated by Loughborough with new control strategies • Consisting of three main parts • Orbit and environment model • Satellite nonlinear dynamics • DFACS (draft free attitude control systems)

  19. DFACS • Sensors: Star tracker + Acc • Estimator: 3 types of Kalman filtering • Guidance: LvLh Frame • Control: Feed-forward controller + Model predictive controller/PD controller • Actuation: Ion thruster assembly + 3 magnetic torquers • Environment: Dipole models of the Earth magnetic filed or 8th order IGRF2000 model, atmosphere/air density modelled by MSIS90 model • Disturbance: drag, gravity, ion thruster assembly misalignment

  20. Performance specifications:

  21. Feedforward + MPC performance

  22. Comparison between constant and periodic disturbance models

  23. Disturbance estimation

  24. Conclusions • MPC provides a promising tool for satellite magnetic attitude control • Feedforward further improves its performance • Attempts to increase the complexity of the disturbance model seems to have little effect on the performance of the controller • Real-time implementation will be on the main area for research

  25. Acknowledgment Thanks the European Space Agency (ESA) for • Financial support • Provision of the GOCE simulator • Comments from Drs. Denis Fertin and Christian Phillipe

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