NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
A Micromechanical INS/GPS System for Small SatellitesThe cost and complexity of large satellite space missions continue to escalate. To reduce costs, more attention is being directed toward small lightweight satellites where future demand is expected to grow dramatically. Specifically, micromechanical inertial systems and microstrip global positioning system (GPS) antennas incorporating flip-chip bonding, application specific integrated circuits (ASIC) and MCM technologies will be required. Traditional microsatellite pointing systems do not employ active control. Many systems allow the satellite to point coarsely using gravity gradient, then attempt to maintain the image on the focal plane with fast-steering mirrors. Draper's approach is to actively control the line of sight pointing by utilizing on-board attitude determination with micromechanical inertial sensors and reaction wheel control actuators. Draper has developed commercial and tactical-grade micromechanical inertial sensors, The small size, low weight, and low cost of these gyroscopes and accelerometers enable systems previously impractical because of size and cost. Evolving micromechanical inertial sensors can be applied to closed-loop, active control of small satellites for micro-radian precision-pointing missions. An inertial reference feedback control loop can be used to determine attitude and line of sight jitter to provide error information to the controller for correction. At low frequencies, the error signal is provided by GPS. At higher frequencies, feedback is provided by the micromechanical gyros. This blending of sensors provides wide-band sensing from dc to operational frequencies. First order simulation has shown that the performance of existing micromechanical gyros, with integrated GPS, is feasible for a pointing mission of 10 micro-radians of jitter stability and approximately 1 milli-radian absolute error, for a satellite with 1 meter antenna separation. Improved performance micromechanical sensors currently under development will be suitable for a range of micro-nano-satellite applications.
Document ID
19960054143
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Barbour, N.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Brand, T.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Haley, R.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Socha, M.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Stoll, J.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Ward, P.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Weinberg, M.
(Draper (Charles Stark) Lab., Inc. Cambridge, MA United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1995
Subject Category
Space Communications, Spacecraft Communications, Command And Tracking
Accession Number
96N36389
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available