How it works
The magnetic fields for EMFF are generated by sending current through coils of wire. The interaction between the magnetic dipoles created is easily understood with a far field approximation where the separation distance between two vehicles is large compared to the physical size of the dipole. By controlling the dipoles on various vehicles, attraction, repulsion, and shear forces can be created. Combined with reaction wheels, any desired maneuver can be performed as long as the formation’s center of mass is not required to change.Applications
The EMFF system is most applicable in cases where multiple spacecraft are free-flying relative to one another and there is no need to control the center of mass of the system. NASA’s Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF) mission and space telescope assembly are just two such types of missions. EMFF provides the foremost advantage of reduced dependence on consumables.{{cite journal, last1=Kong, first1=Edmund M. C., last2=Kwon, first2=Daniel W., last3=Schweighart, first3=Samuel A., last4=Elias, first4=Laila M., last5=Sedwick, first5=Raymond J., last6=Miller, first6=David W., title=Electromagnetic Formation Flight for Multisatellite Arrays, journal=Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets, volume=41, issue=4, year=2004, pages=659–666, issn=0022-4650, doi=10.2514/1.2172D. W. KwonTestbed
The MIT-SSL constructed two EMFF testbed vehicles for demonstrating control of 2-D formations on a large flat floor. Vehicles are suspended on a frictionless air carriage and are completely self-contained using RF communications, microprocessors, and a metrology system. Liquid Nitrogen maintains cryogenic temperatures and batteries provide the power to the high-temperature superconductive (HTS) coils. The testbed has demonstrated control of the relativeAwards
Former Space Systems Lab associate director Dr. Raymond Sedwick (now at the University of Maryland, College Park) has been awarded the first Bepi Colombo Prize for a paper on electromagnetic formation flight. According to Aero-Astro Professor Manuel Martinez-Sanchez, who worked with Colombo and was a juror in the competition, "The jury was unanimous in that Ray's paper best represented 'Bepi' Colombo's spirit of innovation and originality, combined with rigor."Collaborators
Research on electromagnetic formation flight or similar projects is also ongoing at: *The Institute of Space and Astronautical Science / JAXAOther journal articles
*Elias, Laila M., Kwon, Daniel W., Sedwick, Raymond J., and Miller, David W., "Electromagnetic Formation Flight Dynamics including Reaction Wheel Gyroscopic Stiffening Effects" ''Journal of Guidance, Control, and Dynamics'', Vol. 30, No. 2, Mar–Apr. 2007, pp. 499–511.References
External links