This research addresses minimum-fuel pinpoint lunar landing at the South Pole, focusing on trajectory design and near-optimal guidance aimed at driving a spacecraft from a circular low lunar orbit (LLO) to an instantaneous hovering state above the lunar surface. Orbit dynamics is propagated in a high-fidelity ephemeris-based framework, which employs spherical coordinates as the state variables and includes several harmonics of the selenopotential, as well as third-body gravitational perturbations due to the Earth and Sun. Minimum-fuel two-impulse descent transfers are identified using Lambert problem solutions as initial guesses, followed by refinement in the high-fidelity model, for a range of initial LLO inclinations. Then, a feedback Lambert-based impulsive guidance algorithm is designed and tested through a Monte Carlo campaign to assess the effectiveness under non-nominal conditions related to injection and actuation errors. Because the last braking maneuver is relatively large, a finite-thrust, locally flat, near-optimal guidance is introduced and applied. Simplified dynamics is assumed for the purpose of defining a minimum-time optimal control problem along the last thrust arc. This admits a closed-form solution, which is iteratively used until the desired instantaneous hovering condition is reached. The numerical results in non-nominal flight conditions testify to the effectiveness of the guidance approach at hand in terms of propellant consumption and precision at landing.

Minimum-fuel trajectories and near-optimal explicit guidance for pinpoint landing from low lunar rbit / Caruso, Matteo; De Angelis, Giulio; Leonardi, Edoardo Maria; Pontani, Mauro. - In: AEROSPACE. - ISSN 2226-4310. - 12:3(2025), pp. 1-24. [10.3390/aerospace12030183]

Minimum-fuel trajectories and near-optimal explicit guidance for pinpoint landing from low lunar rbit

De Angelis, Giulio
Secondo
;
Leonardi, Edoardo Maria
Penultimo
;
Pontani, Mauro
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

This research addresses minimum-fuel pinpoint lunar landing at the South Pole, focusing on trajectory design and near-optimal guidance aimed at driving a spacecraft from a circular low lunar orbit (LLO) to an instantaneous hovering state above the lunar surface. Orbit dynamics is propagated in a high-fidelity ephemeris-based framework, which employs spherical coordinates as the state variables and includes several harmonics of the selenopotential, as well as third-body gravitational perturbations due to the Earth and Sun. Minimum-fuel two-impulse descent transfers are identified using Lambert problem solutions as initial guesses, followed by refinement in the high-fidelity model, for a range of initial LLO inclinations. Then, a feedback Lambert-based impulsive guidance algorithm is designed and tested through a Monte Carlo campaign to assess the effectiveness under non-nominal conditions related to injection and actuation errors. Because the last braking maneuver is relatively large, a finite-thrust, locally flat, near-optimal guidance is introduced and applied. Simplified dynamics is assumed for the purpose of defining a minimum-time optimal control problem along the last thrust arc. This admits a closed-form solution, which is iteratively used until the desired instantaneous hovering condition is reached. The numerical results in non-nominal flight conditions testify to the effectiveness of the guidance approach at hand in terms of propellant consumption and precision at landing.
2025
minimum-fuel lunar descent; pinpoint landing; near-optimal explicit guidance; low lunar orbit; Lambert-based trajectory optimization; powered descent guidance; South Pole landing
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Minimum-fuel trajectories and near-optimal explicit guidance for pinpoint landing from low lunar rbit / Caruso, Matteo; De Angelis, Giulio; Leonardi, Edoardo Maria; Pontani, Mauro. - In: AEROSPACE. - ISSN 2226-4310. - 12:3(2025), pp. 1-24. [10.3390/aerospace12030183]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1734610
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