Space flight experience with the Shuttle Orbiter control system
Abstract
Experience gained through the Shuttle Orbital Flight Test program has matured the engineering understanding of the Shuttle on-orbit control system. The geneology of the control systems (called digital autopilots, or DAPs, and used by the Shuttle for on-orbit operations) is reviewed, the flight experience gained during the flight test program is examined within the context of preflight analysis and test results, and issues for the operational phase of the Shuttle, including constraints upon both operations and analysis still required to increase confidence in the Shuttle's ability to handle capabilities not experienced during the flight test program are addressed. Two orbital autopilots have resulted from computer memory and time constraints on a flight control system, with many different, flight phase unique requirements. The transition DAP, used for insertion and deorbit, has more active sensors and redundancy but a less complex data processing scheme excluding state estimation with fewer choices of operational mode.
- Publication:
-
Large Space Antenna Systems Technology
- Pub Date:
- May 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983lsas.rept..949C
- Keywords:
-
- Automatic Pilots;
- Digital Systems;
- Flight Control;
- Flight Tests;
- Space Shuttle Orbiters;
- Computerized Simulation;
- Flexing;
- Performance Prediction;
- State Estimation;
- Vernier Engines;
- Launch Vehicles and Space Vehicles