Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 24 segundos...
Inicio  /  Aerospace  /  Vol: 8 Par: 10 (2021)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Air-Launch Experiment Using Suspended Rail Launcher for Rockoon

Tadayoshi Shoyama    
Ayana Banno    
Yousuke Furuta    
Noboru Kurata    
Daisuke Ode    
Yutaka Wada and Takafumi Matsui    

Resumen

The method of air-launching a rocket using a launcher suspended from a balloon, referred to as a rockoon, can improve the flight performance of small rockets. However, there have been safety issues and flight trajectory errors due to uncertainty with respect to the launch direction. Air-launch experiments were performed to demonstrate a rail launcher equipped with a control moment gyroscope to actively control the azimuth angle. As a preliminary study, it was suspended via a crane instead of a balloon. The rockets successfully flew along the target azimuth line and impacted the predicted safe area. The elevation angle of the launcher rail exhibited a fluctuation composed of two frequency components. A double-pendulum model with a rigid rod suspended by a wire was proposed to predict this behavior. Significant design parameters and error sources were investigated using this model, revealing the constraining effect of a large mass above the wire and elevation angle fluctuation, which caused trajectory errors due to the friction force on the rail guide and thrust misalignment. Finally, tradeoffs in designing the rail length were found between the launcher clear velocity and elevation fluctuations.

 Artículos similares