Controlling the Eccentricity of Polar Lunar Orbits with Low‐Thrust Propulsion
Author(s) -
O. C. Winter,
D. C. Mourão,
Cristiano Fiorillo Melo,
Elbert E. N. Macau,
J. L. Ferreira,
Jean Paulo dos Santos Carvalho
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
mathematical problems in engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.262
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1026-7077
pISSN - 1024-123X
DOI - 10.1155/2009/159287
Subject(s) - eccentricity (behavior) , frozen orbit , perturbation (astronomy) , satellite , thrust , orbital elements , orbital eccentricity , circular orbit , physics , orbit (dynamics) , geodesy , geosynchronous orbit , propulsion , collision , sun synchronous orbit , three body problem , aerospace engineering , geology , planet , classical mechanics , computer science , astronomy , engineering , computer security , political science , law , thermodynamics
It is well known that lunar satellites in polar orbits suffer a high increase on the eccentricity due to the gravitational perturbation of the Earth. That effect is a natural consequence of the Lidov-Kozai resonance. The final fate of such satellites is the collision with the Moon. Therefore, the control of the orbital eccentricity leads to the control of the satellite's lifetime. In the present work we study this problem and introduce an approach in order to keep the orbital eccentricity of the satellite at low values. The whole work was made considering two systems: the 3-body problem, Moon-Earth-satellite, and the 4-body problem, Moon-Earth-Sun-satellite. First, we simulated the systems considering a satellite with initial eccentricity equals to 0.0001 and a range of initial altitudes between 100 km and 5000 km. In such simulations we followed the evolution of the satellite's eccentricity. We also obtained an empirical expression for the length of time needed to occur the collision with the Moon as a function of the initial altitude. The results found for the 3-body model were not significantly different from those found for the 4-body model. Secondly, using low-thrust propulsion, we introduced a correction of the eccentricity every time it reached the value 0.05. These simulations were made considering a set of different thrust values, from 0.1 N up to 0.4 N which can be obtained by using Hall Plasma Thrusters. In each run we measured the length of time, needed to correct the eccentricity value (from e=0.04 to e=0.05). From these results we obtained empirical expressions of this time as a function of the initial altitude and as a function of the thrust value
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