DocumentCode :
104426
Title :
In-Orbit Tracking of Resident Space Objects: A Comparison of Monocular and Stereoscopic Vision
Author :
Segal, Sharon ; Gurfil, Pini ; Shahid, Kamran
Author_Institution :
Technion - Israel Inst. of Technol., Haifa, Israel
Volume :
50
Issue :
1
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Jan-14
Firstpage :
676
Lastpage :
688
Abstract :
This paper develops new methods for vision-based satellite attitude control aimed at space-based optical tracking of resident space objects (RSOs). An Earth-orbiting chaser satellite equipped with either one or two body-fixed cameras can successfully track an RSO provided that the target is kept within the camera field of view. Because the cameras are body fixed, the attitude of the satellite needs to be controlled to maintain target lock. Novel vision-based control algorithms are developed to align the chaser camera´s optical axis with the chaser-target line of sight. Two control architectures are presented for the cases of monocular and stereoscopic vision. In the case of the monocular architecture, relative chaser-target acceleration information is not available. Moreover, in both cases unknown perturbations can impair the tracking performance. To increase the tracking algorithm´s robustness to these effects, a variable structure attitude control technique is employed. The stability of the developed control laws are substantiated based on Lyapunov´s direct method and demonstrated using Monte Carlo simulations. The results clearly show that using stereoscopic vision yields faster target tracking, increased robustness to noise and field-of-view limits, and reduced fuel consumption compared with monocular vision-based attitude tracking.
Keywords :
Lyapunov methods; Monte Carlo methods; attitude control; object tracking; satellite tracking; stereo image processing; target tracking; Earth-orbiting chaser satellite; Lyapunov direct method; Monte Carlo simulations; attitude tracking; body-fixed cameras; chaser-target acceleration information; chaser-target line of sight; in-orbit tracking; monocular vision; resident space objects; satellite attitude control; space-based optical tracking; stereoscopic vision; target lock; target tracking; vision-based control; Acceleration; Cameras; Satellites; Sensors; Space vehicles; Target tracking; Vectors;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Aerospace and Electronic Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9251
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TAES.2013.120006
Filename :
6809943
Link To Document :
بازگشت