The heterogeneity of the small body population complicates the prediction of small body properties before the spacecraft's arrival. In the context of autonomous small body exploration, it is crucial to develop algorithms that estimate the small body characteristics before orbit insertion and close proximity operations. This paper develops a vision-based estimation of the small-body rotational state (i.e., the center of rotation and rotation axis direction) during the approach phase. In this mission phase, the spacecraft observes the rotating celestial body and tracks features in images. As feature tracks are the projection of the landmarks’ circular movement, the possible rotation axes are computed. Then, the rotation axis solution is chosen among the possible candidates by exploiting feature motion and a heuristic approach. Finally, the center of rotation is estimated from the center of brightness. The algorithm is tested on more than 800 test cases with two different asteroids (i.e., Bennu and Itokawa), three different lighting conditions, and more than 100 different rotation axis orientations. Each test case is composed of about 250 synthetic images of the asteroid which are used to track features and determine the rotational state. Results show that the error between the true rotation axis and its estimation is below 10° for 80% of the considered test cases, implying that the proposed algorithm is a suitable method for autonomous small body characterization.
Vision-based estimation of small body rotational state
Panicucci, Paolo;
2023-01-01
Abstract
The heterogeneity of the small body population complicates the prediction of small body properties before the spacecraft's arrival. In the context of autonomous small body exploration, it is crucial to develop algorithms that estimate the small body characteristics before orbit insertion and close proximity operations. This paper develops a vision-based estimation of the small-body rotational state (i.e., the center of rotation and rotation axis direction) during the approach phase. In this mission phase, the spacecraft observes the rotating celestial body and tracks features in images. As feature tracks are the projection of the landmarks’ circular movement, the possible rotation axes are computed. Then, the rotation axis solution is chosen among the possible candidates by exploiting feature motion and a heuristic approach. Finally, the center of rotation is estimated from the center of brightness. The algorithm is tested on more than 800 test cases with two different asteroids (i.e., Bennu and Itokawa), three different lighting conditions, and more than 100 different rotation axis orientations. Each test case is composed of about 250 synthetic images of the asteroid which are used to track features and determine the rotational state. Results show that the error between the true rotation axis and its estimation is below 10° for 80% of the considered test cases, implying that the proposed algorithm is a suitable method for autonomous small body characterization.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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