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Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission

This paper presents a robotic capture concept that was developed as part of the e.deorbit study by ESA. The defective and tumbling satellite ENVISAT was chosen as a potential target to be captured, stabilized, and subsequently de-orbited in a controlled manner. A robotic capture concept was develope...

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Autores principales: Jaekel, Steffen, Lampariello, Roberto, Rackl, Wolfgang, De Stefano, Marco, Oumer, Nassir, Giordano, Alessandro M., Porges, Oliver, Pietras, Markus, Brunner, Bernhard, Ratti, John, Muehlbauer, Quirin, Thiel, Markus, Estable, Stephane, Biesbroek, Robin, Albu-Schaeffer, Alin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7805711/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33500979
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2018.00100
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author Jaekel, Steffen
Lampariello, Roberto
Rackl, Wolfgang
De Stefano, Marco
Oumer, Nassir
Giordano, Alessandro M.
Porges, Oliver
Pietras, Markus
Brunner, Bernhard
Ratti, John
Muehlbauer, Quirin
Thiel, Markus
Estable, Stephane
Biesbroek, Robin
Albu-Schaeffer, Alin
author_facet Jaekel, Steffen
Lampariello, Roberto
Rackl, Wolfgang
De Stefano, Marco
Oumer, Nassir
Giordano, Alessandro M.
Porges, Oliver
Pietras, Markus
Brunner, Bernhard
Ratti, John
Muehlbauer, Quirin
Thiel, Markus
Estable, Stephane
Biesbroek, Robin
Albu-Schaeffer, Alin
author_sort Jaekel, Steffen
collection PubMed
description This paper presents a robotic capture concept that was developed as part of the e.deorbit study by ESA. The defective and tumbling satellite ENVISAT was chosen as a potential target to be captured, stabilized, and subsequently de-orbited in a controlled manner. A robotic capture concept was developed that is based on a chaser satellite equipped with a seven degrees-of-freedom dexterous robotic manipulator, holding a dedicated linear two-bracket gripper. The satellite is also equipped with a clamping mechanism for achieving a stiff fixation with the grasped target, following their combined satellite-stack de-tumbling and prior to the execution of the de-orbit maneuver. Driving elements of the robotic design, operations and control are described and analyzed. These include pre and post-capture operations, the task-specific kinematics of the manipulator, the intrinsic mechanical arm flexibility and its effect on the arm's positioning accuracy, visual tracking, as well as the interaction between the manipulator controller and that of the chaser satellite. The kinematics analysis yielded robust reachability of the grasp point. The effects of intrinsic arm flexibility turned out to be noticeable but also effectively scalable through robot joint speed adaption throughout the maneuvers. During most of the critical robot arm operations, the internal robot joint torques are shown to be within the design limits. These limits are only reached for a limiting scenario of tumbling motion of ENVISAT, consisting of an initial pure spin of 5 deg/s about its unstable intermediate axis of inertia. The computer vision performance was found to be satisfactory with respect to positioning accuracy requirements. Further developments are necessary and are being pursued to meet the stringent mission-related robustness requirements. Overall, the analyses conducted in this study showed that the capture and de-orbiting of ENVISAT using the proposed robotic concept is feasible with respect to relevant mission requirements and for most of the operational scenarios considered. Future work aims at developing a combined chaser-robot system controller. This will include a visual servo to minimize the positioning errors during the contact phases of the mission (grasping and clamping). Further validation of the visual tracking in orbital lighting conditions will be pursued.
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spelling pubmed-78057112021-01-25 Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission Jaekel, Steffen Lampariello, Roberto Rackl, Wolfgang De Stefano, Marco Oumer, Nassir Giordano, Alessandro M. Porges, Oliver Pietras, Markus Brunner, Bernhard Ratti, John Muehlbauer, Quirin Thiel, Markus Estable, Stephane Biesbroek, Robin Albu-Schaeffer, Alin Front Robot AI Robotics and AI This paper presents a robotic capture concept that was developed as part of the e.deorbit study by ESA. The defective and tumbling satellite ENVISAT was chosen as a potential target to be captured, stabilized, and subsequently de-orbited in a controlled manner. A robotic capture concept was developed that is based on a chaser satellite equipped with a seven degrees-of-freedom dexterous robotic manipulator, holding a dedicated linear two-bracket gripper. The satellite is also equipped with a clamping mechanism for achieving a stiff fixation with the grasped target, following their combined satellite-stack de-tumbling and prior to the execution of the de-orbit maneuver. Driving elements of the robotic design, operations and control are described and analyzed. These include pre and post-capture operations, the task-specific kinematics of the manipulator, the intrinsic mechanical arm flexibility and its effect on the arm's positioning accuracy, visual tracking, as well as the interaction between the manipulator controller and that of the chaser satellite. The kinematics analysis yielded robust reachability of the grasp point. The effects of intrinsic arm flexibility turned out to be noticeable but also effectively scalable through robot joint speed adaption throughout the maneuvers. During most of the critical robot arm operations, the internal robot joint torques are shown to be within the design limits. These limits are only reached for a limiting scenario of tumbling motion of ENVISAT, consisting of an initial pure spin of 5 deg/s about its unstable intermediate axis of inertia. The computer vision performance was found to be satisfactory with respect to positioning accuracy requirements. Further developments are necessary and are being pursued to meet the stringent mission-related robustness requirements. Overall, the analyses conducted in this study showed that the capture and de-orbiting of ENVISAT using the proposed robotic concept is feasible with respect to relevant mission requirements and for most of the operational scenarios considered. Future work aims at developing a combined chaser-robot system controller. This will include a visual servo to minimize the positioning errors during the contact phases of the mission (grasping and clamping). Further validation of the visual tracking in orbital lighting conditions will be pursued. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7805711/ /pubmed/33500979 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2018.00100 Text en Copyright © 2018 Jaekel, Lampariello, Rackl, De Stefano, Oumer, Giordano, Porges, Pietras, Brunner, Ratti, Muehlbauer, Thiel, Estable, Biesbroek and Albu-Schaeffer. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Robotics and AI
Jaekel, Steffen
Lampariello, Roberto
Rackl, Wolfgang
De Stefano, Marco
Oumer, Nassir
Giordano, Alessandro M.
Porges, Oliver
Pietras, Markus
Brunner, Bernhard
Ratti, John
Muehlbauer, Quirin
Thiel, Markus
Estable, Stephane
Biesbroek, Robin
Albu-Schaeffer, Alin
Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission
title Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission
title_full Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission
title_fullStr Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission
title_full_unstemmed Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission
title_short Design and Operational Elements of the Robotic Subsystem for the e.deorbit Debris Removal Mission
title_sort design and operational elements of the robotic subsystem for the e.deorbit debris removal mission
topic Robotics and AI
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7805711/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33500979
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2018.00100
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