A relatively general formulation for studying dynamics and control of a large class of space systems is developed. The formulation has the following distinctive features:
The above multibody dynamics formalism involves representing structural de formation in terms of system modes. This feature has several advantages: the for mulation effort and derivation time are dramatically reduced; the complexity of the governing equations of motion is considerably simplified: the terms representing struc tural flexibility contributions are decoupled due to orthogonality of the normal modes with respect to the mass and stiffness matrices: and the physical interpretation of the results becomes more meaningful, since the modal frequencies represent resonance conditions for the overall structure. For geometrically time varying systems, the modes are updated at user specified intervals, thus maintaining a faithful represen tation of structural fiexiblity throughout the simulation sequence. Furthermore, the finite element method used in the calculation of system modes makes the present algo rithm ideal for visualization of the spacecraft dynamics and control through computer animation. A video depicting modal interactions of the evolving Space Station has been produced in collaboration with the University Computer Services Visualization Group.
Applicability and versatility of the general formulation are illustrated through the analysis of two evolutionary stages of the Space Station: the Eirst Milestone onfiguration and the ssembly Qomplete Configuration. Effects of the number of system modes, and operational disturbances (solar panel sun tracking, Orbiter dock ing, crew motion and manipulator tasks) are investigated. Control strategies using both linear and nonlinear dynamics have been implemented and their relative perfor mance compared. It is shown that the controller imparts the Space Station, which has a gravitationally unstable orientation, a desired degree of stability. The simulation results represent important information and may help in defining the design loads for the Space Station’s main truss structure, solar arrays, modules and other secondary components.
Summarizing, the unique feature of this study is evident in the development of an interdisciplinary integrated algorithm synthesizing multihody dynamics, finite element method for modal discretization, symbolic manipulation, application of linear and nonlinear control approaches, and computer animation