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Pose Measurement Performance of the Argon Relative Navigation Sensor Suite in Simulated-Flight Conditions
Author(s) -
Joseph M. Galante,
John Van Eepoel,
Matt Strube,
Nat Gill,
Marcelo Salabert Gonzalez,
Andrew Hyslop,
Bryan Patrick
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation and control conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2012-4927
Subject(s) - suite , computer science , argon , physics , geography , archaeology , atomic physics
Argon is a flight-ready sensor suite with two visual cameras, a flash LIDAR, an on- board flight computer, and associated electronics. Argon was designed to provide sensing capabilities for relative navigation during proximity, rendezvous, and docking operations between spacecraft. A rigorous ground test campaign assessed the performance capability of the Argon navigation suite to measure the relative pose of high-fidelity satellite mock-ups during a variety of simulated rendezvous and proximity maneuvers facilitated by robot manipulators in a variety of lighting conditions representative of the orbital environment. A brief description of the Argon suite and test setup are given as well as an analysis of the performance of the system in simulated proximity and rendezvous operations.

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