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A risk-constrained multi-stage decision making approach to the architectural analysis of planetary missions.

Authors :
Kuwata, Yoshiaki
Pavone, Marco
Balaram, J.
Source :
2012 IEEE 51st IEEE Conference on Decision & Control (CDC); 1/ 1/2012, p2102-2109, 8p
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

This paper presents a novel risk-constrained multi-stage decision making approach to the architectural analysis of planetary rover missions. In particular, focusing on a 2018 Mars rover concept, which was considered as part of a potential Mars Sample Return campaign, we model the entry, descent, and landing (EDL) phase and the rover traverse phase as four sequential decision-making stages. The problem is to find a sequence of divert and driving maneuvers so that the rover drive is minimized and the probability of a mission failure (e.g., due to a failed landing) is below a user-specified bound. By solving this problem for several different values of the model parameters (e.g., divert authority), this approach enables rigorous, accurate and systematic trade-offs for the EDL system vs. the mobility system, and, more in general, cross-domain trade-offs for the different phases of a space mission. The overall optimization problem can be seen as a chance-constrained dynamic programming problem, with the additional complexity that 1) in some stages the disturbances do not have any probabilistic characterization, and 2) the state space is extremely large (i.e, hundreds of millions of states for trade-offs with high-resolution Martian maps). To this purpose, we solve the problem by performing an unconventional combination of average and minimax cost analysis and by leveraging high efficient computation tools from the image processing community. Preliminary trade-off results are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9781467320658
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
2012 IEEE 51st IEEE Conference on Decision & Control (CDC)
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
86542302
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/CDC.2012.6426090