Vertical Planetary Landing on Sloped Terrain Using Optical Flow Divergence Estimates
Hann Woei Ho, Ye Zhou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a bio-inspired, low-resource control method for autonomous spacecraft landing on sloped terrain using optical flow divergence estimates, ensuring stability and terrain alignment.
Contribution
It presents a nonlinear control strategy leveraging local flow divergence estimates for stable, smooth landings on inclined surfaces, addressing challenges of terrain inclination and nonlinear dynamics.
Findings
Stable landings with exponential decay of velocity and height.
Effective alignment with inclined terrain at touchdown.
Robust control using minimal computational resources.
Abstract
Autonomous landing on sloped terrain poses significant challenges for small, lightweight spacecraft, such as rotorcraft and landers. These vehicles have limited processing capability and payload capacity, which makes advanced deep learning methods and heavy sensors impractical. Flying insects, such as bees, achieve remarkable landings with minimal neural and sensory resources, relying heavily on optical flow. By regulating flow divergence, a measure of vertical velocity divided by height, they perform smooth landings in which velocity and height decay exponentially together. However, adapting this bio-inspired strategy for spacecraft landings on sloped terrain presents two key challenges: global flow-divergence estimates obscure terrain inclination, and the nonlinear nature of divergence-based control can lead to instability when using conventional controllers. This paper proposes a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpacecraft Dynamics and Control · Aerospace Engineering and Energy Systems · Space Satellite Systems and Control
