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AE 590 Seminar: Interplanetary Spacecraft Trajectory Design and Optimization

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Department of Aerospace Engineering
Location
CIF 2035
Date
Oct 11, 2021   4:00 - 5:00 pm  
Speaker
Professor Emeritus Bruce Conway, Department of Aerospace Engineering, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Contact
Courtney McLearin
E-Mail
cmcleari@illinois.edu
Views
125
Originating Calendar
Aerospace Engineering Seminars

Abstract:
There are many types of interplanetary trajectories; e.g. 2-impulse Hohmann transfer (Mars and Venus missions) , impulsive + gravity assist (Galileo & Cassini), impulsive + low-thrust electric propulsion (Dawn, NEAR). Each type requires different methods for determining feasible trajectories. But feasibility is not sufficient. Optimization is also required to obtain the best spacecraft mass delivered to the target planet so that scientific instrumentation and/or maneuvering fuel to extend mission life can be maximized. The last 30 years have seen great improvement in the analysis and numerical methods available to optimize such trajectories. In particular, evolutionary and heuristic algorithms, such as genetic algorithms and particle swarm optimization now significantly aid mission design. Optimizing trajectories for complicated multi-flyby missions such as Galileo and Cassini, which took many person-years of work when done at JPL in the 1980’s, have been transformed by our research group into something that can be done in just a few hours on a laptop with very little a priori information, basically just a range of desired dates for departure and arrival and the type of launch vehicle that will be used.

Biography:
Bruce Conway is a Professor Emeritus and Research Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the U of I. He received the Ph. D. in Aeronautics & Astronautics from Stanford University in 1980.  


His research is primarily in the fields of celestial mechanics, spacecraft trajectory optimization, numerical optimization methods, and differential games. He is a fellow of the American Astronautical Society, associate editor for several journals, and recently retired as the editor in chief of the J. of Optimization Theory & Applications. 

In recent years he has worked on grants and contracts from NASA, the US Missile Defense Agency, and the Air Force Research Laboratory.  

Prof. Conway is also an airline transport rated pilot and instrument flight instructor with almost 3000 hours of flight experience. 

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