タイトル | Combined Structural and Trajectory Control of Variable-Geometry Planetary Entry Systems |
本文(外部サイト) | http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20120006721 |
著者(英) | Kwok, Kawai; Pellegrino, Sergio; Quadrelli, Marco B. |
著者所属(英) | California Inst. of Tech. |
発行日 | 2011-11-01 |
言語 | eng |
内容記述 | Some of the key challenges of planetary entry are to dissipate the large kinetic energy of the entry vehicle and to land with precision. Past missions to Mars were based on unguided entry, where entry vehicles carried payloads of less than 0.6 T and landed within 100 km of the designated target. The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) is expected to carry a mass of almost 1 T to within 20 km of the target site. Guided lifting entry is needed to meet these higher deceleration and targeting demands. If the aerodynamic characteristics of the decelerator are variable during flight, more trajectory options are possible, and can be tailored to specific mission requirements. In addition to the entry trajectory modulation, having variable aerodynamic properties will also favor maneuvering of the vehicle prior to descent. For proper supersonic parachute deployment, the vehicle needs to turn to a lower angle of attack. One approach to entry trajectory improvement and angle of attack control is to embed a variable geometry decelerator in the design of the vehicle. Variation in geometry enables the vehicle to adjust its aerodynamic performance continuously without additional fuel cost because only electric power is needed for actuating the mechanisms that control the shape change. Novel structural and control concepts have been developed that enable the decelerator to undergo variation in geometry. Changing the aerodynamic characteristics of a flight vehicle by active means can potentially provide a mechanically simple, affordable, and enabling solution for entry, descent, and landing across a wide range of mission types, sample capture and return, and reentry to Earth, Titan, Venus, or Mars. Unguided ballistic entry is not sufficient to meet this more stringent deceleration, heating, and targeting demands. Two structural concepts for implementing the cone angle variation, a segmented shell, and a corrugated shell, have been presented. |
NASA分類 | Man/System Technology and Life Support |
レポートNO | NPO-47102 |
権利 | Copyright, Distribution as joint owner in the copyright |
URI | https://repository.exst.jaxa.jp/dspace/handle/a-is/263022 |
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