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Transfer Function in the Inertial Reference Frame

Consider a spacecraft of cylindrical symmetry whose symmetry axis is also the axis of maximum moment of inertia. Inside the spacecraft is the PGB (Pico Gravity Box) laboratory, also of cylindrical symmetry and with the axis of maximum moment of inertia coinciding (within manufacture/mounting errors) with the symmetry axis of the spacecrfat. The PGB is mechanically coupled to the spacecraft (along the sysmmetry axis) by means of mechanical springs with low stiffness k in all directions. Let the spacecraft and PGB be rigidly locked to one another during launch and until they have reached the nominal spin angular velocity tex2html_wrap_inline171 around the principal axis of inertia of the system. Let the cruise phase, under the effect of a non-gravitational force tex2html_wrap_inline173 (e.g. due to the atmospheric drag), begin at time t=0, once the rigid lockers have been unlocked and the initial transient phase has been completed. Since we refer here to the GG space experiment we consider only the motion of the spacecraft/PGB system in the x,y plane perpendicular to the spin axis, which is the plane of the expected signal; we know that tilting torques are negligible, that differential rotations in azimuth can be dealt with and that motions along the z-spin axis are sufficiently small (see ``GG Pre Phase A Report'', ASI, September 1996)

In an inertial reference frame whose centre of mass coincides, at t=0, with the centre of mass of the spacecraft/PGB system the equations of motion read:

displaymath185

where tex2html_wrap_inline187 is the mass of the spacecraft, tex2html_wrap_inline189 the mass of the PGB, tex2html_wrap_inline191 and tex2html_wrap_inline193 are the rotating and non rotating damping coefficients respectively, the position vectors and velocities lie in the x,y plane and subscripts s and p refer to the spacecraft and the PGB respectively. tex2html_wrap_inline191 is known as rotating damping coefficient because it is due to friction inside rotating parts of the system.

tex2html_wrap_inline193 is known as non-rotating damping coefficient because it is due to friction inside non-rotating parts of the system. Note that tex2html_wrap_inline191 and tex2html_wrap_inline193 refer to two physically different types of energy dissipation in the rotor and do not depend on the reference frame (e.g., fixed or rotating) used to describe the problem (see Paper I, §6). In GG there is no damping due to friction between rotating and non rotating parts (referred to as friction in the bearings) because there is no motor, there are no bearings and there are no non-rotating parts. Friction in the bearings is present in ground based rotating machines and the corresponding torque tends to slow down the machine (were not for the presence of the motor). Note that in the equations of motion of ground based rotors the effect of friction in the bearings does not enter either, because the motor supplies the energy required in order to maintain the spin rate of the system at its nominal value. Friction in the bearings is therefore not relevant for these calculations, neither in GG nor in ground machines and should not be confused with friction between non-rotating parts (expressed by the non-rotating damping coefficient tex2html_wrap_inline193 ) which has a stabilizing effect. As for the tex2html_wrap_inline193 coefficient used in the following, it should be read as automatically multiplied by a safety factor tex2html_wrap_inline215 slightly larger than 1 ( tex2html_wrap_inline219 ).

By applying the Fourier transform to the equations of the previous system we obtain the following linear system of equations:

displaymath221

The solutions of this system are:

displaymath223

The transfer function for the GG spacecraft-PGB system is defined as:

displaymath225

The mechanical coupling between the GG spacecraft and the PGB is tex2html_wrap_inline227 , with a natural frequency of oscillation tex2html_wrap_inline229 . The mass of the spring is neglected. The total energy dissipation due to rotating friction is expressed by the quality factor Q. When in supercritical rotation, we use for the coefficient of rotating damping: tex2html_wrap_inline233 (supercritical rotating damping), which would be incorrect if the system were dominated by a large amount of rotating viscous damping. We have shown in Paper I (Appendix) that in such a case the corresponding coefficient of rotating damping in the equations of motion is given by tex2html_wrap_inline235 with tex2html_wrap_inline237 . Since this is certainly not the GG case, a coefficient tex2html_wrap_inline191 of the previous form (i.e. tex2html_wrap_inline241 ) can never be used in combination with a value for the viscous quality factor tex2html_wrap_inline237 ( tex2html_wrap_inline245 in the GG spacecraft-PGB case), but only with values tex2html_wrap_inline247 (in point of fact it is tex2html_wrap_inline249 for very small viscous rotating damping and tex2html_wrap_inline251 for an intermediate amount; see Paper I, Appendix). To the contrary, the ESTEC Technical Reoport on GG (see its Appendix provided on October 7 1996 at ESA HQ during the GG presentation) uses tex2html_wrap_inline235 with Q=10, thus implicitly making the assumption that the GG system be dominated by a very large amount of rotating viscous friction. There is no physical grounds for such an assumption because rotating damping in the GG system comes essentially from energy dissipated inside the tiny springs when deformed at the spin frequency of tex2html_wrap_inline257 and any contribution due to dissipation in the rotating active dampers is very small because of the very small damping forces that they are required to provide (see Paper I, Appendix and §3). Among the transfer functions shown below we have computed also the case with Q=100; tex2html_wrap_inline263 is the value measured experimentally for a PGB prototype spring that we have manufactured carrying 3 wires for signal transmission (see ``GG Pre Phase A Report'', ASI, September 1996).

  figure89
Figure 1: Transfer function of the GG spacecraft-PGB system in the inertial reference frame for the cases of zero spin rate and supercritical rotation at tex2html_wrap_inline257 . At zero spin rate (black curve) the well known behaviour of passive noise attenuators on the ground is recovered, where the height of the peak at the natural frequency is about Q. In supercritical rotation we obtain the green, red and blue curves (for Q=10, 20 and 100 respectively) showing that the system is effective in attenuating vibrations at the GG spin/signal frequency of tex2html_wrap_inline257 (the higher the Q the better the attenuation, which is peculiar of supercritical rotation). This means attenuation of disturbances which act at tex2html_wrap_inline257 w.r.t. the fixed frame, i.e. which are DC or tex2html_wrap_inline283 w.r.t. the rotating frame. The system is obviously transparent to disturbances at frequencies below the natural one; in particular it is transparent to effects which are DC w.r.t. the fixed frame (i.e. at tex2html_wrap_inline257 w.r.t. the rotating one). The ``ESTEC'' curve corresponds to a system in supercritical rotation dominated by a very large amount of rotating viscous friction (see Paper I, Appendix); such a system would be almost ineffective in attenuating vibrational noise.

  figure93
Figure 2: Transfer function of the GG spacecraft-PGB system in the inertial reference frame at zero spin rate, in supercritical and in subcritical rotation at tex2html_wrap_inline257 and tex2html_wrap_inline289 respectively. The coefficient of rotating damping is tex2html_wrap_inline291 for the supercritical case and tex2html_wrap_inline293 for the subcritical one, which is correct for the GG system. The black curve shows the transfer function at zero spin rate and Q=10. The violet curve shows the transfer function of the system in slow subcritical rotation with Q=50; the peak at natural frequency has height about Q. The green, red and blue curves refer to the cases of fast supercritical rotation with Q=10, 50 and 100 respectively; noise reduction of disturbances acting at tex2html_wrap_inline257 (w.r.t. the fixed frame) is apparent, a higher Q giving a better attenuation.


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       (Anna Nobili- nobili@dm.unipi.it)