Flight control laws for NASA's Hyper-X research vehicle
Author(s) -
J. Davidson,
Frederick J. Lallman,
John McMinn,
José D. MartínGuerrero,
Joe Pahle,
Mark A. Stephenson,
John Selmon,
David Bose
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
guidance, navigation, and control conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1999-4124
Subject(s) - aerospace engineering , aeronautics , law , engineering , computer science , political science
The goal of the Hyper-X program is to demonstrate and validate technology for design and performance predictions of hypersonic aircraft with an airframe-integrated supersonic-combustion ramjet propulsion system. Accomplishing this goal requires flight demonstration of a hydrogen-fueled scramjet powered hypersonic aircraft. A key enabling technology for this flight demonstration is flight controls. Closed-loop flight control is required to enable a successful stage separation, to achieve and maintain the design condition during the engine test, and to provide a controlled descent. Before the contract award, NASA developed preliminary flight control laws for the Hyper-X to evaluate the feasibility of the proposed scramjet test sequence and descent trajectory. After the contract award, a Boeing/NASA partnership worked to develop the current control laws. This paper presents a description of the Hyper-X Research Vehicle control law architectures with performance and robustness analyses. Assessments of simulated flight trajectories and stability margin analyses demonstrate that these control laws meet the flight test requirements.
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