Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8056348 Acta Astronautica 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Space missions involving Hall Effect Thrusters are more and more common, and designs of both Hall Effect Thrusters and low-thrust trajectories require more elaborated process to meet the on-going mission demands. The design of a new Hall Effect Thruster can be improved by considering mission goals for high-demand missions rather than by relying on the current empirical and experimental design process. Moreover, the optimization of low-thrust trajectories involving the Hall Effect Thrusters can also be improved by incorporating the physics of the Hall Effect Thrusters rather than using a simplified model of the given thruster or incorporating the limited existing thruster characteristics. In order to accomplish these two objectives, a simultaneous design environment of the Hall Effect Thruster and its associated low-thrust trajectory is developed. By linking these two disciplines through a direct embedding of the Hall thruster analysis module within the low-thrust optimal control problem, we show that a new Hall Effect Thruster and the associated low-thrust trajectory can be designed simultaneously. As a starting example applying this coupled strategy, a plausible, high-demand mission scenario is attempted with highly simplified assumptions on trajectory optimization, which is the final stage of a geostationary transfer orbit that takes place entirely outside the Van Allen radiation belts.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Aerospace Engineering
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