NASA/TM-2004-213552, Beech, G.S. and Hampton, R.D. and Rupert, J.K., A "Kane’s Dynamics" Model for the Active Rack Isolation System Part Two: Nonlinear Model Development, Verification, and Simplification, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center , Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC 20546-0001, November 2004, pp. 32, Format(s): PDF 1705k |
Many microgravity space-science experiments require vibratory acceleration levels that are unachievable without active isolation. The Boeing Corporation’s active rack isolation system (ARIS) employs a novel combination of magnetic actuation and mechanical linkages to address these isolation requirements on the International Space Station.
Effective model-based vibration isolation requires: (1) An isolation device, (2) an adequate dynamic; i.e., mathematical, model of that isolator, and (3) a suitable, corresponding controller. This Technical Memorandum documents the validation of that high-fidelity dynamic model of ARIS.
The verification of this dynamics model was achieved by utilizing two commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) software tools: Deneb’s ENVISION®, and Online Dynamics’ Autolev™. ENVISION is a robotics software package developed for the automotive industry that employs three-dimensional computer-aided design models to facilitate both forward and inverse kinematics analyses. Autolev is a DOS-based interpreter designed, in general, to solve vector-based mathematical problems and specifically to solve dynamics problems using Kane’s method.
The simplification of this model was achieved using the small-angle theorem for the joint angle of the ARIS actuators. This simplification has a profound effect on the overall complexity of the closed-form solution while yielding a closed-form solution easily employed using COTS control hardware.
| Keywords: | aris, dynamics, control, math model. |
|---|---|
| Subjects: | Engineering: Engineering (General) |
| ID Code: | 691 |
| Deposited On: | 17 February 2005 |