Spacecraft Line-Of-Sight Jitter Mitigation and Management Lessons Learned and Engineering Best PracticesPredicting, managing, controlling, and testing spacecraft line-of-sight (LoS) jitter caused by micro-vibrations due to onboard internal disturbance sources is a formidable multidisciplinary engineering task. It is especially challenging for those missions hosting high-performance, vibration-sensitive optical sensor payloads with stringent pointing stability requirements. Both NASA and ESA are planning technically aggressive spaceflight missions that include ultra-high-performance optical payloads with delicate, highly vibration-sensitive scientific and observational instruments. The GN&C community of practice will need to leverage and build upon their collective experiences and lessons learned to better address future micro-vibration challenges. To identify lessons learned and best engineering practices the NASA Engineering & Safety Center (NESC) sponsored a two-day Spacecraft LoS Jitter Workshop in late 2019. The workshop’s goal was to provide a multidisciplinary forum to elicit deeper understanding of the issues related to solving the spacecraft LoS jitter/micro-vibration problem. A primary objective was to identify and share best practices, rules of thumb, and options for jitter-related activities. Representatives from NASA, JPL, ESA, along with NASA’s industrial partners, independent consultant subject matter experts, and members of academia participated in the workshop. This paper will describe the motivation for the NASA Spacecraft LoS Jitter Workshop and summarize the identified findings, observations, and recommendations.
Document ID
20210013465
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Cornelius J Dennehy (Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Aron A Wolf (Jet Propulsion Lab La Cañada Flintridge, California, United States)
Davin K. Swanson (Raytheon Intelligence and Space)
Date Acquired
April 12, 2021
Subject Category
Space Transportation And Safety
Meeting Information
Meeting: 11th International ESA Conference on Guidance, Navigation & Control Systems