Title: Interplanetary Trajectories
1Chapter 11
- Interplanetary Trajectories
2Patched conics(Hohmann1925)
3Patched conics
- Homann transfers dont take into account other
gravity fields (2-Body approach) - Interplanetary mission goes through different
phases, each under a different gravity field. - Instead of a single 2-body approach, use several
2-body solutions along with the idea of a sphere
of influence
4Universal Law of Gravitation
ag 0 as r
5Sphere of activity
r
R
6From the Sun-Earth two-body problem,
7Assume that r ltlt R
8The empirical formula usually used is
9Earths SOA(Sun-earth system)
- Earth m 5.981024 kg
- Sun M 1.991030 kg
- Astronaumical unit (AU)
- R 1.496 108 km
- r/R (m/3M)1/3 0.0100 , r 1,496,000 km
- r/R (m/M)2/5 0.0062 , r 924,850 km
- Only the order of magnitude matters.
10Planetary data
11Rendezvous
rendezvous point
U C F
Goal 20 yd pass Vreceiver 4 yd/s, Vball 10
yd/s Time of fly (TOF) 20 yd/(10 yd/s) 2
s Lead distance 4 yd/s 2 s 8 yd Head start
distance 20 yd - 8 yd 12 yd Wait time 12
yd/(4 yd/s) 3 s
12Launch window(Outbound)
Mars, arrival
q21
Earth, arrival
q12
Earth, departure
Mars, departure
13Transfer orbit
Time of fly
Phase angle at launch
14Launch window(Inbound)
Mars, departure
q21
Earth, departure
Earth, arrival
Mars, arrival
15Synodic period
16Synodic periods and trip times(days)
17Interplanetary trajectory
Earth
Earth parking orbit
Outside Earth SOA
Outside planet SOA
Planet parking orbit
Planet
18Assumptions
Radii of the planet orbit and the transfer orbit
Radii of the Earth and planet sphere activity
Radii of the Earth and planet parking orbits
19Results
- From the Earth parking orbit to the outside of
the Earth SOA is considered as escape to
infinity. - After escape, the spacecraft is considered at
the Earth orbit (around the Sun). - The absolute velocity of the spacecraft after
escape is the velocity of Earth plus the
residual velocity after escape.
20Velocity needed
Hohmann transfer orbit from earth (planet 1) to
planet 2
At perihelion
21Velocities relative to earth
Residual velocity
Conservation of energy
Velocity after boost at parking orbit
22Dv
Velocity at parking orbit
The maneuver is
23Earth to Mars (Dv)
V 32.730 km/s, VÃ… 29.785 km/s v 2.945
km/s Assume parking orbit altitude 200 km r0
6,578.137 km, v 7.784 km/s v0 11.40 km/s
(after boost) Dv 3.611 km/s
24Earth to Mars (time)
T12 2.2366107 s 258.8 days q12 44.3 q21
255.1 Twait 3.9256107 s 454.3 days Ttrip
2T12 Twait 972.1 days
25Escape from parking orbit
26Hyperbolic orbit
e gt 1, a lt 0, E gt 0
d
r ,
excess speed
27Keplers eq.hyperbola orbit
28Time to escape
- v 2.945 km/s, E v2/2 4.3365 km2/s2
- a -mÃ…/(2E) -45,958.7 km
- r0 rp 6,578.137 km a(1 - e)
- e 1.143
- After escape, r 929,009.8 km
- 2.609 radians, F 3.6138 radians
- t T0 274,306 s 3.17 days
29Impact parameter
r , cosn - 1/e
y cos-1(-1/e) 151
b (-a r0)sin (180 - y) 25,470 km
30Possible maneuver points
31Timeline Earth to Mars
- Wait for the launch window (Mars 44.3 ahead of
Earth) - Escape from earth, 3.2 days
- Flying from Earth to Mars, 258.8 days
- Wait for coming back, 454.3 days
- Flying from Mars to Earth, 258.8 days
- Return to Earth, 3.2 days
32Planetary flyby
33Possible trajectories
34Optimal planetary capturing
- Given v, find the parking orbit so that the Dv
is minimized.
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37Capturing at Mars
The transfer orbit at 1.8877108 km At
aphelion, Voh 21.48 km/s v 24.13 - 21.48
2.65 km/s Dv 1.87 km/s Mars Gravitational
parameter mmars 4.269104 km3/s2 rp 24,316
km parking orbit altitude 24,316 3,395
20,921 km