- Series
- Other Talks
- Time
- Monday, February 20, 2017 - 3:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Guggenheim Building Room 442
- Speaker
- Rodney L. Anderson – Jet Propulsion Lab.
- Organizer
- Rafael de la Llave
New and proposed interplanetary missions increasingly require the
design of trajectories within challenging multi-body environments that
stress or exceed the capabilities of the two-body design methodologies
typically used over the last several decades. These current methods
encounter difficulties because they often require appreciable user
interaction, result in trajectories that require significant amounts of
propellant, or miss potential mission-enabling options. The use of
dynamical systems methods applied to three-body and multi-body models
provides a pathway to obtain a fuller theoretical understanding of the
problem that can then result in significant improvements to trajectory
design in each of these areas. In particular, the computation of
periodic Lagrange point and resonant orbits along with their associated
invariant manifolds and heteroclinic connections are crucial to finding
the dynamical channels that provide new or more optimal solutions. These
methods are particularly effective for mission types that include
multi-body tours, Earth-Moon transfers, approaches to moons, and
trajectories to asteroids. The inclusion of multi-body effects early in
the analysis for these applications is key to providing a more complete
set of solutions that includes improved trajectories that may otherwise
be missed when using two-body methods.
This seminar will focus on two representative trajectory design
applications that are especially challenging. The first is the design of
tours using flybys of planets or moons with a particular emphasis on
the Galilean moons and Europa. In this case, the exploration of the
design space using the invariant manifolds of resonant and Lyapunov
orbits provides information such as the resonance transitions that are
required as part of the tour. The second application includes endgame
scenarios, which typically involve an approach to a moon with an
objective of either capturing into orbit around the moon or landing on
the surface. Often, the invariant manifolds of particular orbits may be
used in this case to provide a wide set of approach options for both
capture and landing analyses. New methods will also be discussed that
provide a foundation for rigorously analyzing the transit of
trajectories through the libration point regions that is necessary for
the approach and capture phase for bodies such as Europa and the Moon.
These methods provide a fundamentally new method to search for the
invariant manifolds of orbits and hyperbolic invariant sets associated
with libration points while giving additional insight into the dynamics
of the flow in these regions.