CSSI Webinar: Probability computations for non-linear relative motion
Linear methods for computing satellite collision probability can be extended to accommodate non-linear relative motion in the presence of changing position and velocity uncertainties. Collision probability analysis for spherical objects exhibiting linear relative motion is accomplished by combining covariances and physical object dimensions at the point of closest approach. The resulting covariance ellipsoid and hard body are projected onto the plane perpendicular to relative velocity by assuming linear relative motion and constant positional uncertainty throughout the brief encounter. Collision potential is determined from the object footprint on the projected, two-dimensional, covariance ellipse. For non-linear motion, the dimension associated with relative velocity must be reintroduced. This can be simply done by breaking the collision tube into sufficiently small cylinders such that the sectional motion is nearly linear, computing the linear probability associated with each section, and then summing. The method begins with object position and velocity data at the time of closest approach. Propagation of position, velocity, and covariance is done forward/backward in time until a user limit is reached. An alternate method is presented that creates a voxel grid in Mahalanobis space, computes the probability of each affected voxel as the combined object passes through the space, and sums. These general methods are not dependent on a specific propagator or linear probability model.The 30 minute presentation will be followed by 10-15 minutes of live Q & A. Attend the webinar and receive a gift from AGI once you submit your feedback survey!
About the Presenter: Dr. Salvatore Alfano has been a major contributor to the space operations community for more than 20 years at both the policy and technical development levels. As technical program manager for CSSI, his current work deals with determining accuracy requirements for meaningful conjunction assessments and improving satellite conjunction assessment algorithms. Alfano is well versed in astronautical, electrical, and computer engineering. He pioneered work in kinetic energy guidance, satellite visibility and close-approach prediction, high-accuracy orbit determination, continuous-thrust orbit transfers, and collision probability. He significantly advanced the state-of-the-art in all these areas and is recognized for such by the scientific community. Additional accomplishments include: 38 industry publications; 10 awards & honors; and eight professional association memberships.