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Control issues of microgravity vibration isolationActive vibration isolation systems contemplated for microgravity space experiments may be designed to reach given performance requirements in a variety of ways. An analogy to passive isolation systems proves to be illustrative but lacks the flexibility as a design tool of a control systems approach and may lead to poor designs. For example, it is shown that a focus on equivalent stiffness in isolation system design leads to a controller that sacrifices robustness for performance. Control theory as applied to vibration isolation is reviewed and passive analogies are discussed. The loop shaping trade-off is introduced and used to design a single-degree-of-freedom fedback controller. An algebraic control design methodology is contrasted to loop shaping and critiqued. Multi-axis vibration isolation and the problems of decoupled single loop control are introduced through a two-degree-of-freedom example problem. It is shown that center of mass uncertainty may result in instability when decoupled single loop control is used. This results from the ill-conditioned nature of the feedback control design. The use of the Linear Quadratic Regulator synthesis procedure for vibration isolation controller design is discussed.
Document ID
19920036438
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Knospe, C. R.
(Virginia Univ. Charlottesville, VA, United States)
Hampton, R. D.
(Virginia Univ. Charlottesville, VA, United States)
Allaire, P. E.
(Virginia, University Charlottesville, United States)
Date Acquired
August 15, 2013
Publication Date
November 1, 1991
Publication Information
Publication: Acta Astronautica
Volume: 25
ISSN: 0094-5765
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Accession Number
92A19062
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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