1,097 research outputs found

    Extension of the proximity-quotient control law for low-thrust propulsion

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    In this paper, the proximity quotient control law, first developed by Petropoulos, is extended to account for both third body effects and solar radiation pressure based on the mission requirements for a hypothetical NEO deflection mission to the asteroid Apophis using a solar sublimation deflection technique. The perturbing effect of solar radiation pressure becomes relevant when dealing with large optics in space. Equations for the disturbing acceleration are derived for the perturbations, then analytically incorporated into the equations determining the rate-of-change in time of the orbital elements, and tested using a Earth-asteroid transfer. Another specific variant of the control law is developed for the orbital maintenance of the spacecraft formation in the vicinity of the NEO

    Design of optimal spacecraft-asteroid formations through a hybrid global optimization approach

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    Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to present a methodology and experimental results on using global optimization algorithms to determine the optimal orbit, based on the mission requirements, for a set of spacecraft flying in formation with an asteroid. Design/methodology/approach – A behavioral-based hybrid global optimization approach is used to first characterize the solution space and find families of orbits that are a fixed distance away from the asteroid. The same optimization approach is then used to find the set of Pareto optimal solutions that minimize both the distance from the asteroid and the variation of the Sun-spacecraft-asteroid angle. Two sample missions to asteroids, representing constrained single and multi-objective problems, were selected to test the applicability of using an in-house hybrid stochastic-deterministic global optimization algorithm (Evolutionary Programming and Interval Computation (EPIC)) to find optimal orbits for a spacecraft flying in formation with an orbit. The Near Earth Asteroid 99942 Apophis (2004 MN4) is used as the case study due to a fly-by of Earth in 2029 leading to two potential impacts in 2036 or 2037. Two black-box optimization problems that model the orbital dynamics of the spacecraft were developed. Findings – It was found for the two missions under test, that the optimized orbits fall into various distinct families, which can be used to design multi-spacecraft missions with similar orbital characteristics. Research limitations/implications – The global optimization software, EPIC, was very effective at finding sets of orbits which met the required mission objectives and constraints for a formation of spacecraft in proximity of an asteroid. The hybridization of the stochastic search with the deterministic domain decomposition can greatly improve the intrinsic stochastic nature of the multi-agent search process without the excessive computational cost of a full grid search. The stability of the discovered families of formation orbit is subject to the gravity perturbation of the asteroid and to the solar pressure. Their control, therefore, requires further investigation. Originality/value – This paper contributes to both the field of space mission design for close-proximity orbits and to the field of global optimization. In particular, suggests a common formulation for single and multi-objective problems and a robust and effective hybrid search method based on behaviorism. This approach provides an effective way to identify families of optimal formation orbits

    Orbital debris removal with solar concentrators

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    In 1993 solar concentrators were first proposed to deflect asteroids away from a collision course with the Earth. The original concept was expanded by the authors, and proved to be effective and technologically feasible. One way to deflect the asteroid is to produce a slow decay of its orbit by inducing a thrust via concentrated solar light. Two mechanisms have been investigated: the sublimation of the surface of the asteroid to generate a jet of gas and the induced thrust by light pressure and enhanced Yarkovsky effect. If the concentrators are reduced in size, a similar concept can be adopted to remove orbital debris and inert satellites. In this paper, we present an orbital debris removal system based on concentrated solar light. We will show how enhanced solar pressure, generated by a formation of solar concentrators, can be used to accelerate the decay of small inert objects orbiting the Earth. A set of modified proximal motion equations is proposed to describe the relative dynamics of the solar concentrators with respect to the target piece of debris. The paper will provide an analysis of the cost of the optimal control of the concentrators during the deflection of the debris and a system engineering analysis. In particular, we will show that the concentrator acts as an active solar sail while not deflecting, and as a hybrid solar sail (i.e. the orbit is maintained with an auxiliary low-thrust engine) while deflecting the debris. The results will show that objects with even a small area-to-mass ratio (down to 0.01) can be brought from an 800 km to a 200 km altitude orbit in few hundred days of constant operation. The paper will discuss also the possibility to vaporize some small size targets with high power solar pumped laser

    Online information needs of cancer patients and their organizations

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    Increasingly patients, relatives and carers are accessing health information via the internet. However, the health profession and people affected by cancer are becoming concerned with the quality of that information. A European survey was conducted under the auspices of the FP7 European Commission funded Eurocancercoms project1 during the period September 2010–March 2011. Its aim was to assess current online information needs of people with cancer particularly those who seek information using online social media technologies and the internet more broadly. A literature review was undertaken to gain a greater understanding of health seeking behaviour regarding cancer patients’ information needs and patient preferences for accessing different formats and media. This was used to inform the design and validation of online pan-European, multi-lingual questionnaires distributed via patient organizations and via specific Eurocancercoms partner organizations. This paper presents the results of this survey and suggests recommendations to be incorporated into the design of the online platform, ecancerHub, one of the intended outcomes of the Eurocancercoms project following this research. People want a wide variety of easy to find, easy to understand accurate information about cancer and how it is likely to impact on their everyday lives and on those close to them. They differ in the amount and detail of the information they would like and on their ability to identify quality information and understand it sufficiently to base their health-care decisions on. The majority of respondents raised the issue of quality of information and many requested recommendations of websites by the people who usually influence them most, the health professionals involved in their care

    2D cognitive optical data processing with phase change materials

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    We demonstrate high-density, multi-level crystallization of a Ge2Sb2Te5 thin film using tightly focused femtosecond laser pulses. The optical reflectivity in each distinct phase states level is characterized for applications in ultra-fast cognitive parallel data processing
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