Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8056061 | Acta Astronautica | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Inspired by successful extended missions such as the ISEE-3, an investigation for the extended mission that involves a lunar encounter following a Sun-Earth halo orbit mission is considered valuable. Most previous studies present the orbit-to-orbit transfers where the lunar phase is not considered. Intended for extended missions, the present work aims to solve for the minimum phasing âV for various initial lunar phases. Due to the solution multiplicity of the two-point boundary value problem, the general constrained optimization algorithm that does not identify multiple feasible solutions is shown to miss minima. A two-step differential corrector with a two-body Lambert solver is developed for identifying multiple solutions. The minimum âV associated with the short-way and long-way approaches can be recovered. It is acquired that the required âV to cover all initial lunar phases is around 45Â m/s for the halo orbit with out-of-plane amplitude Az greater than 3.5Ã105Â km, and 14Â m/s for a small halo orbit with Az=1Ã105Â km. In addition, the paper discusses the phasing planning based on the âV result and the shift of lunar phase with halo orbit revolution.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Aerospace Engineering
Authors
Hongru Chen, Yasuhiro Kawakatsu, Toshiya Hanada,