FIRST Explorer -- An innovative low-cost passive formation-flying system
Jan E. S. Bergman (1, 6), Richard J. Blott (2), Alistair B. Forbes, (3), David A. Humphreys (3), David W. Robinson (4), Constantinos Stavrinidis, (5) ((1) Aurora Scientific Consulting Ltd., UK, (2) Space Enterprise, Partnerships Ltd., UK, (3) National Physical Laboratory, UK

TL;DR
The paper introduces FIRST Explorer, a low-cost passive formation-flying system that simplifies spacecraft control by allowing drift and using advanced metrology, enabling new radio astronomy observations.
Contribution
It proposes a novel passive formation-flying approach that reduces complexity and cost, demonstrated through the planned ESA FIRST Explorer mission for radio astronomy.
Findings
High-accuracy relative position and velocity determination
Reduced spacecraft control requirements
Potential for new low-frequency radio astronomy observations
Abstract
Formation-flying studies to date have required continuous and minute corrections of the orbital elements and attitudes of the spacecraft.This increases the complexity, and associated risk, of controlling the formation, which often makes formation-flying studies infeasible for technological and economic reasons. Passive formation-flying is a novel space-flight concept, which offers a remedy to those problems. Spacecraft in a passive formation are allowed to drift and rotate slowly, but by using advanced metrology and statistical modelling methods, their relative positions, velocities, and orientations are determined with very high accuracy. The metrology data is used directly by the payloads to compensate for spacecraft motions in software. The normally very stringent spacecraft control requirements are thereby relaxed, which significantly reduces mission complexity and cost. Space-borne…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpacecraft Dynamics and Control · Aerospace Engineering and Energy Systems · Astro and Planetary Science
