Searching for orbits with minimum fuel consumption for station-keeping maneuvers: an application to lunisolar perturbations (Q473630)
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English | Searching for orbits with minimum fuel consumption for station-keeping maneuvers: an application to lunisolar perturbations |
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Searching for orbits with minimum fuel consumption for station-keeping maneuvers: an application to lunisolar perturbations (English)
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24 November 2014
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Summary: The present paper has the goal of developing a new criterion to search for orbits that minimize the fuel consumption for station-keeping maneuvers. This approach is based on the integral over the time of the perturbing forces. This integral measures the total variation of velocity caused by the perturbations in the spacecraft, which corresponds to the equivalent variation of velocity that an engine should deliver to the spacecraft to compensate the perturbations and to keep its orbit Keplerian all the time. This integral is a characteristic of the orbit and the set of perturbations considered and does not depend on the type of engine used. In this sense, this integral can be seen as a criterion to select the orbit of the spacecraft. When this value becomes larger, more consumption of fuel is required for the station keeping, and, in this sense, less interesting is the orbit. This concept can be applied to any perturbation. In the present research, as an example, the perturbation caused by a third body is considered. Then, numerical simulations considering the effects of the Sun and the Moon in a satellite around the Earth are shown to exemplify the method.
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