MathWorks announced that MATLAB and Simulink have been deployed to the International Space Station as part of NASA’s Synchronized Position Hold Engage and Reorient Experimental Satellites (SPHERES) project.
A NASA astronaut with three SPHERES floating freely in the International Space Station. |
SPHERES are bowling-ball-sized spherical satellites used inside the space station to test a set of well-defined instructions for spacecraft performing autonomous rendezvous and docking maneuvers. The space station crew, on-ground engineers, and guest scientists plan to use SPHERES to study satellite servicing, vehicle assembly, and formation flying spacecraft configurations. By using MATLAB and Simulink, the team can test algorithms related to relative attitude control and station-keeping between satellites, retargeting and image plane filling maneuvers, collision avoidance, and fuel-balancing algorithms.
Additionally, MATLAB will help to render real-time, three-dimensional animation of the satellites during the experiment, allowing on-ground researchers to better visualize the ongoing experiment and view it from any angle. Until now, the only visualization available was a video from a fixed location.
“We are excited that NASA has qualified and deployed MATLAB and Simulink to the space station,” said Jon Friedman, aerospace marketing manager, MathWorks. “This deployment will help the NASA SPHERES team accelerate their work as more complex algorithms and tools can be developed in MATLAB and Simulink and reused directly on the satellites.”