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ISS Rendezvous, Proximity Operations, Docking

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Title: ISS Rendezvous, Proximity Operations, Docking


1
ISS Rendezvous, Proximity Operations,Docking
Berthing Considerations
  • April 25, 2005
  • Presented and edited by Al DuPont
  • NASA/JSC/Aeroscience Flight Mechanics Division
  • Data Information content provided
  • by David Strack and Brian Rishikof
  • Odyssey Space Research

2
Topics
  • Background
  • Introductory Charts Regions Around ISS, Sample
    Trajectory, Safe Free Drift Examples, Safe Free
    Drift Drag Effects
  • ISS Safety Considerations
  • Trajectory Considerations
  • Navigation Considerations
  • Control Considerations
  • Docking/Capture Considerations
  • Monitoring and Commanding
  • Crewed Vehicle
  • Demonstration Flight Considerations

3
Background
  • This presentation was assembled by people working
    to support the integration of vehicles into the
    ISS (ATV, HTV, and SLI, OSP)
  • Areas not included are launch, far rendezvous,
    berthing, deorbitalthough some aspects of
    monitoring are included, the broader aspects of
    ground and flight operations is not covered
  • It was put together to provide a guide to basic
    constraints and considerations as opposed to a
    comprehensive set of requirements
  • The presentation does not capture all
    requirements and considerations
  • Despite the distinct groupings in this
    presentation, the requirements and
    considerations are often interrelated
  • The bottom linedesign for safety of the ISSand
    be able to prove it.

4
Regions Around ISS
Approach Ellipsoid
Keep-out Sphere (200m radius)
4km
V-Bar
2km
R-Bar
3 Sigma Dispersion
3 km radius spherical comm coverage
Out of plane minor axis of AE is 2km
Chart taken from a presentation prepared by Paul
Lane/USA in support of Mission Operations Director
ate and modified.
5
Sample Trajectory
Spherical Space-to-Space Comm Range (3km)
Directional Space-to-Space Comm Range (30km)
KOS
AE
V-Bar
KOS
R-Bar
6
ISS Safety Considerations
  • The ISS Safety Requirements Document (SSP 50021)
    provides safety requirements that can effect a
    vehicles design. A few are paraphrased below
  • Two Fault Tolerance for ISS Catastrophic Hazard
  • Single Fault Tolerance for Critical Hazard
  • Design for minimum risk where fault tolerance is
    not practical
  • Two inhibits on functions whose inadvertent
    operation may cause a hazard
  • Three inhibits on functions whose inadvertent
    operation could result in a catastrophic hazard.
    Two of the three inhibits shall be monitored.
  • Monitor and control any function whose loss could
    result in a critical hazard
  • Reporting of hazard, loss of function, change of
    inhibit status and change of monitoring status in
    time to control the hazard or compensate for the
    change
  • SSP 50021 was not designed for free-flight phase
    so additional requirements may also apply

7
ISS Safety Considerations (2)
  • The most likely hazard for free flying vehicles
    is collision. To mitigate this hazard the vehicle
    designers could
  • Meet the Fault tolerance requirement for all
    systems (or design to minimum risk where
    appropriate)
  • Pair being less than two fault tolerant with the
    ability to safely abort the operation and leave
    the vicinity of the ISS
  • Show that collision does not create a
    catastrophic failure on the ISS
  • The vehicles designers must receive concurrence
    on all safety related issues from ISSP and
    appropriate review panels

8
ISS Safety Considerations (3)
  • There are still other Safety related requirements
    that have been imposed on vehicles flying near
    the ISS
  • Requirements implemented through Segment
    Specification Documents Interface Requirements
    Documents as opposed to standard SSP documents
  • Fail Safe The system must be automatically (for
    uncrewed vehicles) fail safe or initiate a
    collision avoidance maneuver while in free flight
  • Safe Trajectory Targeting and Trajectories must
    be designed such that the safety of the ISS is
    preserved
  • No ISSP fail safe requirements exist for vehicles
  • Baseline rules exist and may become requirements
    in the incoming vehicles Segment Specification
    or Interface Requirements Document
  • The vehicle shall not complete rendezvous to the
    vicinity of the ISS if the vehicle is zero fault
    tolerant to catastrophic hazard
  • The system shall automatically initiate a
    Collision Avoidance Maneuver (CAM) if a failure
    occurs that leaves the vehicle zero fault
    tolerant while in the vicinity of the ISS
  • Design must consider how to handle failure cases
    that lead to a zero fault tolerant vehicle while
    in the docking/capture process

9
ISS Safety Considerations (4)
  • Computer Based Control Safety Systems
    Requirements (SSP 50038) will likely have a
    strong influence on vehicle design. A few are
    paraphrased below
  • Overrides shall require at least two independent
    actions by the operator
  • Need two independent commands to deactivate
    critical capabilities
  • Separate control path for each inhibit used as a
    control
  • Alternate functional paths shall be separated for
    critical functions
  • A processor shall not independently control
    multiple inhibits to a hazard
  • Safety requirements may also have a strong impact
    in other systems
  • Payload handling
  • Laser safety
  • Battery safety
  • Etc.

10
Trajectory Considerations
  • Trajectories must be designed such that ISS
    safety is preserved
  • There are no ISSP requirements documents that
    dictate trajectory requirements, however there
    are concept documents and precedence
  • Refers to all potential trajectories a vehicle
    may take when all dispersions (typically up to 3
    sigma) are taken into account (including GNC,
    environment, failures, etc.)
  • Cases for failure to dock or to be captured by
    the SSRMS may have complex trajectory issues due
    to interaction with the ISSmay need special
    systems to ensure a safe trajectory
  • Safe trajectories must be defined for each region
    near the ISS
  • Baselined regions defined in concept documents
  • Approach Ellipsoid (AE) 4x2x2 km (SSP 50011)
  • Keep out Sphere (KOS) 200 m radius (SSP 50011)
  • Omni directional communications disk 3x1½ km
    (SSP 50235)
  • Safe free drift trajectories should be employed
    when ever possible.
  • 24 hour safe free drift trajectories prior to the
    maneuver that takes the vehicle inside the AE
  • 24 hour safe free drift trajectories prior to
    entering the KOS when practical attempt to
    maximize safe free drift region
  • Maximize safe free drift trajectory when
    practical inside KOS

11
Safe Free Drift Examples
Far Field Approach
ISS
ISS
12
Safe Free Drift - Drag Effects
With Aero Drag
No Drag
13
Trajectory Considerations (3)
  • Other baseline goals and considerations related
    to safe trajectory
  • In the vicinity of the ISS, the vehicle must
    follow a predefined trajectory with predefined
    collision avoidance maneuvers planned for any
    point on the trajectory
  • The vehicle must not be targeted through the ISS
    except for final approach
  • Trajectories within Keep Out Sphere (200m) of the
    ISS must stay within defined corridors (a survey
    flight may have exceptions)
  • The vehicle shall not get closer than 6 ft to any
    ISS structure - specific requirements for capture
    mechanisms and attachment points may have
    exceptions

14
Trajectory Considerations (4)
  • A vehicle must be able to execute a Collision
    Avoidance Maneuver (CAM) at all times for all
    mission phases
  • Where applicable, a safe free drift trajectory
    may be used
  • An active CAM (thrust to maneuver the vehicle
    away from the ISS) must be used when free drift
    would be unsafe, too lengthy, or difficult to
    monitor
  • A CAM must put the vehicle on a 24 hour safe free
    drift trajectory
  • Planned post CAM actions must keep the vehicle on
    a permanently safe trajectory
  • CAM must take the vehicle outside the AE within
    90 minutes and must remain outside the AE
  • During a CAM the vehicle must stop closing and
    establish an opening rate within half the
    distance from the ISS
  • CAM in close to the ISS must begin with an
    opening rate

15
Trajectory Considerations (5)
  • Vehicle Sensors
  • Trajectory can be effected by sensor range and
    field of view
  • GPS blockage/multipath may impact vehicle
    trajectory
  • Blockage of vehicle attitude sensors may impact
    trajectory
  • Loss of lock/re-acquire capabilities may affect
    vehicles accelerations
  • Structural Clearance
  • Clearance may impact trajectory and will
    partially define approach corridor
  • Plume Contamination and Thermal Restrictions
  • Plume impingement (from vehicle or ISS) may
    impact trajectory
  • ISS antenna blockage
  • Trajectory must not block ISS antennas
  • Lighting
  • Lighting for adequate visual monitoring and
    sensor conditions may restrict the trajectory
    profile, the timing for trajectories, and even
    the time of year that maneuvers take place
  • The goal may be for lighting to not limit
    activities

16
Trajectory Considerations (6)
  • Communication Requirements
  • May require timing maneuvers to take place over
    ground stations or within range of a
    communications satellite
  • no fly regions due to vehicle-to-vehicle
    communication blockages

17
Navigation Considerations
  • There are no ISSP requirements documents that
    dictate vehicle navigation requirements only
    concept documents
  • The navigation requirements may go in the Segment
    Spec.
  • The vehicle should not rely on ISS for
    determining, maintaining, and monitoring the
    vehicles absolute state (except perhaps while
    attached) (minimize impact to ISS)
  • Crewed vehicles should not rely on the ISS for
    determining the vehicles state prior to
    departure
  • Crewed vehicles may need to separate from dead,
    uncontrolled ISS and therefore should not rely on
    the ISS for navigation
  • For safety, the vehicle should always know its
    navigation state and should monitor it with
    respect to defined limits
  • Assess protection from common mode failure
  • Non-identical systems provides most reliable
    solution
  • Assess the impact of using sensors not originally
    designed for use near a large structures - Earth
    Sensors, Star Trackers, Sun Sensors, GPS

18
Navigation Considerations (2)Using ISS Resources
  • Using ISS resources for relative navigation
    presents certain challenges
  • ISS inertial navigation not specified for high
    performance
  • Large structure introduces rotational errors
    between navigation base and capture point for
    relative attitude determination
  • US GPS systems on the ISS have visibility and
    pointing issues
  • Use of Russian segment ISS GPS system and KURS
    based range/range rate capability will require
    coordination with Russians
  • JAXAs ISS GPS system and their RF communication
    based range/range rate capability are not yet
    available and use of these system will require
    coordination with JAXA
  • Russias KURS system has performance and location
    limitations
  • Navigation systems that require RF communication
    with the ISS needs to be assessed (US, Japan,
    Europe, and Russia all have space-to-space
    communication systems)
  • Existing laser reflectors can effect new laser
    systems
  • Existing laser reflectors may not match required
    locations or design for new systems

19
Control Considerations
  • There are no ISSP requirements documents that
    dictate vehicle control requirements however ISS
    constraints may drive control specification
  • Vehicle control performance requirements can
    depend on several factors
  • ISS control characteristics
  • ISS attitude hold mode a major factor (e.g., ISS
    at LVLH TEA)
  • Different ISS attitude control modes and options
    result in different ISS control motion
    characteristics
  • Russian control system vs US system with Russian
    RCS
  • TEA hold vs fixed attitude hold
  • Design for degraded ISS can strongly impact
    control constraints
  • Moment arms between c.g. and capture point can
    drive vehicle design
  • ISS loads constraints for allowable contact
    conditions

20
Control Considerations (2)
  • Examples of vehicle control system functional
    requirements
  • Must de-activate upon docking contact and/or
    capture
  • Ability to inhibit jet firing (following safety
    inhibit requirements)
  • Ability to re-activate in time to ensure safe
    trajectory after separation (docking and
    berthing)
  • Ability to re-activate in time to safe vehicle
    after failed capture
  • The control performance requirements may define
    several vehicle items
  • Type of controller, size, placement and number of
    jets, control cycle frequency, guidance and
    navigational capabilities
  • The control functional requirements may define
    several vehicle items
  • Avionics architecture, communication design, CDH
    architecture, command and control design, etc.

21
Docking/Capture Considerations
  • Vehicles must design their GNC to meet
    pre-specified docking or capture conditions (ISS
    specific)
  • Docking mechanism capture performance may limit
  • Lateral and rotational misalignment, Lateral and
    rotational rates, Minimum closing velocity
  • ISS structural docking load allowance may limit
  • Maximum closing velocity, Lateral and rotational
    rates
  • Capture mechanism may limit
  • Relative position, Relative rates
  • ISS flex motion can play an important role in
    both capture performance and loads
  • Motion during post-capture/pre-berthed phase may
    impact structure, avionics, and sensors (ISS
    specific)

22
Docking/Capture Considerations (2)
  • Vehicle must be able to recognize a failed
    capture and be able to recover (complete,
    back-out/retry, abort)
  • To recover without abort the vehicle may need to
    understand its inertial and relative state and
    status of the ISS
  • Vehicle must be able to recognize a capture with
    failed completion and be able to recover
    (complete, back-out/retry, abort)
  • ISS may be in free drift for a significant time
    under this scenario
  • ISS/vehicle relative attitude may have
    significant offset
  • Vehicle should limit requirements on ISS to
    support separation from a docked/captured
    condition
  • ISS attitude, control modes, Array orientation
  • De-docking mechanism preparation
  • Monitoring and commanding systems, Navigation
    system, communication systems
  • If separation mechanism fails, vehicle must have
    an alternate method of separating that meets
    nominal separation requirements

23
Monitoring and Commanding
  • There are no ISSP requirements documents that
    dictate ISS crew monitoring or control
    requirements, except
  • There are some CBCS requirements (SSP 50038) that
    are related to this especially related to
    placing, removing, and monitoring inhibits
  • There are Human Rating requirements that are
    applicable to an uncrewed vehicle flying to the
    ISS
  • There are concept documents and precedents for
    monitoring and control considerations
  • Many of the monitoring and control requirements
    may be placed on the vehicles crew instead of
    the ISSs crew for a crewed vehicle
  • When in the vicinity of the ISS, the vehicle will
    be monitored by the ISS crew and by the ground
    personnel when possible

24
Monitoring and Commanding (2)
  • Visual Monitoring (onboard crew)
  • May limit the regions and durations that the
    vehicle can fly
  • May require specific trajectories
  • Likely to impact approach/departure corridor
    definition
  • Examples of Visual monitoring considerations
  • Identify vehicle at 1 km (be able to see it)
  • Determine approximate attitude at 500 m
  • Evaluate trajectory inside 200 m
  • Evaluate docking/capture conditions prior to
    docking/capture
  • Visual monitoring requirements must be met for
    any lighting conditions
  • May affect launch dates, rendezvous timing,
    target positions, etc.
  • Vehicle data must be provided to the ISS during
    all nominal proximity operations and any time the
    vehicle is within 3 km of the ISS
  • This information is used to monitor vehicle
    health, status and trajectory

25
Monitoring and Commanding (3)
  • The vehicle may need to have ISS-to-vehicle
    commanding capabilities
  • For uncrewed vehicles, the Station crew must have
    independent command capability to abort, inhibit
    thrust and enable thrust (SSP 50011)
  • For SSRMS capture this must also include a
    command to inhibit vehicle jets and a command to
    activate an alternate separation mechanism
  • Vehicle/mission specific design may cause
    addition of other required commands
  • For operational flexibility this may include such
    things as Hold/resume, Retreat to hold
    point/continue, go to Free drift, reconfigure,
    separate, remote piloting, etc.
  • Time critical, safety critical ISS-to-vehicle
    commands must be through hardware command (as
    opposed to ISS laptop)

26
Crewed Vehicle
  • Crewed vehicles have a few additional
    considerations (based on experience with Shuttle,
    Soyuz, CRV)
  • Ability to escape from a dead station
  • Ability to escape within a given time limit
  • Ability to allow for safe multiple vehicle
    separation
  • Monitoring role may be done on the vehicle
    instead of the ISS
  • Space-to-space voice communication is likely a
    requirement

27
Demonstration Flight Considerations
  • Demonstration is required prior to flight to ISS
  • Precedents and concept document (SSP 50235)
  • Demonstration flight can be to ISS under certain
    conditions
  • Failure of any demonstration will not lead to
    hazard
  • Functions/capabilities are proven in
    demonstration prior to being relied upon for
    safety
  • Demonstrations must have pass/fail criteria that
    clearly demonstrates the function/capability
  • There must be a reliable method to measure the
    pass/fail criteria
  • ISS may require on-orbit test for key functions
    as part of verification

28
Back-up Charts
29
ISS Resources
  • Attachment Mechanisms
  • APAS Docking Mechanisms (used by the Shuttle)
  • Probe and Drogue Docking Mechanisms (used by
    Russian vehicles and the European ATV)
  • Common Berthing Mechanism (CBM) variety of
    utilities
  • Payload Attachment Systems for unpressurized
    attachment
  • Canadian Mobile Services System (MSS) used for
    capture, for manipulating payloads, for
    attachment at CBMs
  • Japanese JEM Robotic Manipulator System for
    payload manipulation
  • Navigation Support Equipment
  • Laser Reflectors (Shuttle, ATV and HTV)
  • Video Targets (SSRMS, ATV)
  • Visual Targets (US, Russian)
  • Range/range rate capability on JAXA communication
    system
  • Kurs Radar system for Russian vehicles and ATV
  • GPS Receivers/antennas (US, Russian, Japanese)

30
ISS Resources (2)
  • Communication Systems
  • US space-to-ground (including TDRSS) for data,
    voice, and video
  • Russian space-to-ground for data, voice and video
  • US space-to-space for data and voice
  • Russian space-to-space for data, voice, video
    (Russian ARC)
  • Japanese space-to-space for data (HTV ARC)
  • European space-to-space for data (ATV ARC)
  • ISS command and data handling equipment (US and
    Russian)
  • Voice communication equipment
  • Monitoring equipment (cameras, lights, targets,
    windows, monitors, laptops, displays on hardware
    command panels)
  • Command support equipment (laptops, hardware
    command panels, hand controllers)

31
ISS Resources (3)
  • ISS attitude control system
  • ISS navigation system
  • Rotational and Translational state information
  • Raw GPS data for relative GPS navigation
  • Crew members for ISS preparation, vehicle
    monitoring and commanding
  • Links to ground control for ISS preparation,
    vehicle monitoring and commanding
  • ISS command and monitor capability for ISS
    preparation and contingency trouble-shooting
  • Utilities for attached phase support

32
ISS EnvironmentOrbit
  • Orbit ranges
  • 278 460 km
  • 51.3 to 51.9 degree inclination
  • Orbit knowledge
  • Spec from SSP 41000
  • Position 3000 feet (RSS)
  • Velocity Undefined
  • Actual knowledge TBD (much better than 3000
    feet)
  • Change in Orbit due to drag
  • conditions
  • non-emergency conditions

33
ISS EnvironmentAttitude Control
  • Different Attitude Control Modes are available
  • TEA momentum management - low angular rates but
    non-fixed attitude and slow response to
    disturbance
  • Assembly complete design range (SSP 41000, SSP
    50261)
  • Range without Orbiter attached ?15? Yaw, -20? to
    15? Pitch, ?15? Roll
  • Range with Orbiter attached ?15? Yaw, 0? to 25?
    Pitch, ?15? Roll
  • Less than 3.5? variation per orbit (SSP 41000)
  • LVLH hold - fixed attitude, faster response,
    higher angular rates
  • ? 5? undisturbed, docking (SSP 41000)
  • (SSP 41000)
  • Controls to defined attitude such as 0,0,0
    average TEA DTEA (average TEA pitch with no
    out-of-plane component along the approach axis)
  • Adjustable response to CMG saturation levels (set
    at low momentum levels for quick response and
    minimized rate changes for desaturation, set at
    high momentum levels for maximized time between
    jet firings)

Simplified description - many caveats and
details not included
34
ISS EnvironmentPointing
  • ISS specifications from SSP 41000
  • Angular Alignment of US docking port 3.4?/axis
  • Angular alignment of SM aft port 3.4?/axis
  • Any non-articulatable point on ISS 5?/axis
    (under LVLH attitude hold)
  • Angular alignment of Alpha Joint 4?
  • Angular alignment of Beta Joint 6?
  • Attitude knowledge 3?/axis
  • Attitude rate knowledge 0.01?/s/axis
  • Camera pointing accuracy (TBD)
  • SSRMS pointing accuracy (TBD)

35
ISS Environment Blockage/Clearance
  • Clearance and keep out zones
  • ISS structural clearance (safety clearance
    envelopes, robotic arm/MSS pathways,
    articulating/deployable elements)
  • Other vehicle approach/separation corridors
  • Antenna visibility/radiation
  • ISS crew and equipment viewing constraints
  • Sun blockage/shadowing and thermal constraints
  • ISS Solar and Thermal radiator orientation
  • Should design to not impact ISS power/thermal
  • May need to limit solar arrays motion to reduce
    RF signal multipath and/or blockage, plume
    impingement, sun reflection/blockage, etc.
  • Can not stop motion of thermal radiators

36
ISS Environment Configuration
  • Mass properties are not fixed or guaranteed by
    ISS
  • Can design to range of properties for example
  • Aerodynamic properties are not fixed or
    guaranteed by ISS
  • Can use range of ISS configurations
  • Aero properties change during the orbit
  • Surface characteristics are not fixed or
    guaranteed by ISS
  • Expect the ISS configuration to change during its
    life

37
ISS Environment Additional Environment
Considerations
  • GPS Environment
  • US antenna placements have significant blockage
    (array orientation has significant effect) and do
    not point zenith
  • Japanese and Russian antennas have some blockage
  • All have multi-path potential
  • RF Environment
  • Vehicle RF must not interfere with ISS RF or
    radiate sensitive ISS systems
  • Vehicle must consider ISS RF for interference,
    and radiation of the vehicle
  • ISS plume impingement on the vehicle vehicle
    plume impingement on ISS
  • Contamination, thermal heating, structural loads,
    and torques
  • Vehicle design should accommodate all lighting
    conditions
  • Thermal and ESD constraints at attachment points
  • Solar Beta impacts lighting and thermal conditions

38
SSRMS Free Flyer Capture
  • Vehicles being captured by SSRMS are required to
    enter a Capture Box, station-keep for 5 minutes
    during which ISS prepares for capture and then,
    on command from the ISS crew, inhibit jet firing
  • The size and shape of the Capture Box is defined
    by several factors
  • SSRMS reach and stopping distance (partly a
    function of the vehicle mass)
  • Relative state sensor position, orientation and
    field of view
  • Residual relative velocity at free drift
  • Attitudes and attitude rates of ISS and vehicle
    at free drift
  • Position and orientation of grapple fixture
  • Location of the center of mass with respect to
    capture point
  • The structural envelope of both the vehicle and
    the ISS
  • Attachment point of the SSRMS
  • Crew direct field of view
  • The vehicle and the SSRMS will likely have
    different electromagnetic charges so precautions
    must be taken to ensure proper electro-static
    discharge
  • As a precaution against problems with the arm
    after capture but before berthing the vehicle it
    is recommended to plan for 24 hour contingency
    operations on the arm

39
SSRMS Capture Failure Recovery
  • Vehicles must be able to recover from a failed
    SSRMS capture
  • There are a number of different failures
  • Vehicle drifts out of reach
  • Vehicle bumped by the SSRMS Latching End Effector
    (LEE)
  • Vehicle is hit by LEE snares during capture
    attempt, but no capture
  • SSRMS goes to safe mode and cannot capture the
    vehicle
  • Accommodations will need to be made for each
    scenario
  • Vehicle can only be re-activated by ISS Crew
    command
  • SSRMS may still be in the vicinity
  • Both the ISS and the vehicle may be out of
    attitude
  • Vehicles must be able to recover from a capture
    with failed rigidization
  • This situation causes a series of problems
    because the vehicle can still rotate
  • The grapple fixture will eventually contact the
    inside of the LEE and may damage the LEE
  • The vehicle can rotate such that it can contact
    with the SSRMS booms and potentially set up a
    catastrophic hazard
  • This can put both the ISS and vehicle out of
    attitude for separation
  • The vehicle will need an alternate separation
    method that can be commanded by the ISS crew
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