The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G....

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The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering & the Environment, University of Southampton, UK IAC-14-A6.2.4

Transcript of The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G....

Page 1: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environmentR. Blake and H.G. Lewis

Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering & the Environment, University of Southampton, UK

IAC-14-A6.2.4

Page 2: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Evolutionary models are used to guide technical solutions to the space debris problem– These tools incorporate simplified models for

estimating orbital motion and collision probability, for example

– Simulations using these models make assumptions to reduce the many degrees of freedom that exist

• Some research has already been done to understand the influence of assumptions made about external drivers (e.g. solar activity)

• Little research has been done to understand the influence of the model simplifications/assumptions

Introduction

Focus of this presentation is the Cube approach

Page 3: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

External driversSolar activity Launch traffic

ExplosionsCompliance with

mitigation measures

Page 4: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Evaluates collision probabilities between orbiting objects using a “sampling in time” approach:

Number of collisions:

Collision rate:

Spatial density:

The Cube Approach

𝑁𝑡𝑜𝑡= ∫𝑠=0

𝑠=𝐿

[𝑡 𝑠+1− 𝑡𝑠 ] 𝑃 𝑖 , 𝑗 ( 𝑠) 𝑑𝑠

𝑃 𝑖 , 𝑗=𝑠𝑖𝑠 𝑗𝑉 𝑖𝑚𝑝 𝜎𝑈

𝑈=𝑑3

Ud𝑠𝑖=𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑠

𝑈=

𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑠

𝑑3

Page 5: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Two identical objects i and j in circular, polar orbits of a = 7000 km and intersecting at 90:

Idealised case

𝑉 𝑖𝑚𝑝=( 2𝜇𝑎 )

12

𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑠≈𝑑2𝜋 𝑎

Relative velocity:

Residential probability:

Page 6: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Collision rate for this case:

Idealised case𝑃 𝑖 , 𝑗=

12𝜋 2𝑑 ( 2𝜇

𝑎5 )12 𝜎

𝜎=4 𝐴

Combined collision cross-sectional

area:

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• Space Debris Environment Tool Kit:– Orbit propagator & Cube approach implemented in

Python

Implementation in SDETK

Parameter Value

(year) 2009

(year) 3009

ts+1 - ts (days) 0.5, 0.05 and 0.005

d (km) 1, 10 and 100

Page 8: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Comparison of collision rates:

Theory v Implementation in SDETK

Page 9: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Collision rate is inversely proportional to the cube size:

• Increasing time-interval or decreasing cube size reduces the consistency of collision rate estimates– Cube sizes ≥ 10 km, and

– Time-intervals 0.05 days, are preferred

• Increasing the number of Monte Carlo runs also enables good sampling of the space

Findings

𝑃 𝑖 , 𝑗=1

2𝜋 2𝑑 ( 2𝜇𝑎5 )

12 𝜎

Computational cost

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• DAMAGE: full LEO-to-GEO evolutionary model– Uses target-centred version of Cube:

Cube Implementation in DAMAGE

Identifies all cases where a debris object resides within a bounding sphere centred on the target

Size of volume element is proportional to the size of the cube element

Page 11: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

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LEO 10 cm Population (May 2009)

ESA MASTER 2009 population seen in

DAMAGE

29,370 objects ≥ 10 cm

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• Overall collision rate estimates:

DAMAGE Results

Page 13: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• For the idealised, two-object case the number of co-occurring pairs in the cube remains constant but the volume increases (A): collision rate decreases

• In DAMAGE simulation, the number of unique co-occurring pairs in each cube increases as volume increases (B) or (C): overall collision rate appears ~constant

DAMAGE Results

A B C

Page 14: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

• Collision rate between two orbiting objects is inversely proportional to the cube size:– Shown in theory

– Observed in SDETK implementation

• Increasing number of Monte Carlo runs and cube size, or decreasing time-interval improves the consistency of collision rate estimates– Default parameters in DAMAGE (and other

evolutionary models using Cube) likely to be sub-optimal

– Collision rates appear ~constant for changing cube size

– Difficult to address due to computational cost

• Further research is required to understand implications

Conclusions

Page 15: The effect of modelling assumptions on predictions of the space debris environment R. Blake and H.G. Lewis Astronautics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering.

Thank you for your attention

Contact: [email protected]

Thanks to Holger Krag (ESA Space Debris Office) for permission to use the MASTER reference population, and Aleksander Lidtke (University of Southampton) for valuable discussions about the work