Formation Flying of Components of a Large Space Telescope
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Thursday, January 01 2009
advertisement:
A conceptual space telescope having
an aperture tens of meters wide and a
focal length of hundreds of meters
would be implemented as a group of six
separate optical modules flying in formation:
a primary-membrane-mirror
module, a relay-mirror module, a focal-plane-assembly module containing a fast
steering mirror and secondary and tertiary
optics, a primary-mirror-figure-sensing
module, a scanning-electron-beam
module for controlling the shape of the
primary mirror, and a sunshade module.
Formation flying would make it unnecessary
to maintain the required precise
alignments among the modules by
means of an impractically massive rigid
structure. Instead, a control system operating
in conjunction with a metrology
system comprising optical and radio subsystems
would control the firing of small
thrusters on the separate modules to
maintain the formation, thereby acting
as a virtual rigid structure. The control
system would utilize a combination of
centralized- and decentralized-control
methods according to a leader-follower
approach.
Viewing entire briefs requires login/registration.
Registration is free and easy to complete.
If you're already registered with Tech Briefs, simply login at the top of the page.
Subscribe today to receive the INSIDER, a FREE e-mail newsletter from NASA Tech Briefs featuring exclusive previews of upcoming articles, late breaking NASA and industry news, hot products and design ideas, links to online resources, and much more.