During its final descent, how will the InSight lander know cardinal directions in order to land with proper...












1














As explained in @karthikeyan's answer the InSight lander will rely upon its landing system to orient the lander properly, so that once on the ground instruments such as the RISE antennas will be pointing in the proper direction, in this case roughly East and West, more specifically, towards Earth when InSight is near the edge of the planet's disk as seen from Earth.



From this short conference paper:




For RISE, Doppler measurements will be made at times when the Earth is at low elevation, when the Doppler signature due to the rotation of Mars is largest. Two fixed medium-gain antennas, one pointed to the east and one pointed to the west, will be used to provide adequate gain for RISE.




While InSight is still moving horizontally with high velocity during its entry, it has its velocity vector (from whence it comes) as a reference with respect to the terrain. But very near the end of its seven minutes of terror, in the final hover and drop, what reference will it use for lateral orientation (rotation about the vertical)?



There's no useful planetary magnetic field for direction-finding. Is it known what cues the landing system will actually use to orient InSight correctly?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    I am going to taste a guess before looking up for references. I feel that surface features might be compared with the database of images from MRO, which might help in identifying the cardinal direction. Usually, the remote landing employs a camera to look directly below the probe, right from a altitude of few kilometers
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 2:44








  • 1




    @karthikeyan I have a hunch that you have good taste in guesses ;-) I think there are some other answers here about terrain-based navigation on Mars in general, that may have helpful resources.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 2:59










  • haha! It was a typo. I meant "I am going to TAKE a guess..". Anyways, thanks for the suggestions to look into. I'll start my hunt
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 3:11






  • 1




    there seems to be a lack of attitude related information! And I consider my camera backed answer as the resolutions from MRO and lander might be different.
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 5:43






  • 1




    Another possibility is to land while the Sun is at a low inclination close to the horizon and use this as a reference for direction.
    – asdfex
    Nov 24 at 14:16
















1














As explained in @karthikeyan's answer the InSight lander will rely upon its landing system to orient the lander properly, so that once on the ground instruments such as the RISE antennas will be pointing in the proper direction, in this case roughly East and West, more specifically, towards Earth when InSight is near the edge of the planet's disk as seen from Earth.



From this short conference paper:




For RISE, Doppler measurements will be made at times when the Earth is at low elevation, when the Doppler signature due to the rotation of Mars is largest. Two fixed medium-gain antennas, one pointed to the east and one pointed to the west, will be used to provide adequate gain for RISE.




While InSight is still moving horizontally with high velocity during its entry, it has its velocity vector (from whence it comes) as a reference with respect to the terrain. But very near the end of its seven minutes of terror, in the final hover and drop, what reference will it use for lateral orientation (rotation about the vertical)?



There's no useful planetary magnetic field for direction-finding. Is it known what cues the landing system will actually use to orient InSight correctly?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    I am going to taste a guess before looking up for references. I feel that surface features might be compared with the database of images from MRO, which might help in identifying the cardinal direction. Usually, the remote landing employs a camera to look directly below the probe, right from a altitude of few kilometers
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 2:44








  • 1




    @karthikeyan I have a hunch that you have good taste in guesses ;-) I think there are some other answers here about terrain-based navigation on Mars in general, that may have helpful resources.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 2:59










  • haha! It was a typo. I meant "I am going to TAKE a guess..". Anyways, thanks for the suggestions to look into. I'll start my hunt
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 3:11






  • 1




    there seems to be a lack of attitude related information! And I consider my camera backed answer as the resolutions from MRO and lander might be different.
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 5:43






  • 1




    Another possibility is to land while the Sun is at a low inclination close to the horizon and use this as a reference for direction.
    – asdfex
    Nov 24 at 14:16














1












1








1







As explained in @karthikeyan's answer the InSight lander will rely upon its landing system to orient the lander properly, so that once on the ground instruments such as the RISE antennas will be pointing in the proper direction, in this case roughly East and West, more specifically, towards Earth when InSight is near the edge of the planet's disk as seen from Earth.



From this short conference paper:




For RISE, Doppler measurements will be made at times when the Earth is at low elevation, when the Doppler signature due to the rotation of Mars is largest. Two fixed medium-gain antennas, one pointed to the east and one pointed to the west, will be used to provide adequate gain for RISE.




While InSight is still moving horizontally with high velocity during its entry, it has its velocity vector (from whence it comes) as a reference with respect to the terrain. But very near the end of its seven minutes of terror, in the final hover and drop, what reference will it use for lateral orientation (rotation about the vertical)?



There's no useful planetary magnetic field for direction-finding. Is it known what cues the landing system will actually use to orient InSight correctly?










share|improve this question















As explained in @karthikeyan's answer the InSight lander will rely upon its landing system to orient the lander properly, so that once on the ground instruments such as the RISE antennas will be pointing in the proper direction, in this case roughly East and West, more specifically, towards Earth when InSight is near the edge of the planet's disk as seen from Earth.



From this short conference paper:




For RISE, Doppler measurements will be made at times when the Earth is at low elevation, when the Doppler signature due to the rotation of Mars is largest. Two fixed medium-gain antennas, one pointed to the east and one pointed to the west, will be used to provide adequate gain for RISE.




While InSight is still moving horizontally with high velocity during its entry, it has its velocity vector (from whence it comes) as a reference with respect to the terrain. But very near the end of its seven minutes of terror, in the final hover and drop, what reference will it use for lateral orientation (rotation about the vertical)?



There's no useful planetary magnetic field for direction-finding. Is it known what cues the landing system will actually use to orient InSight correctly?







mars lander adcs insight






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 24 at 4:14









Mark Adler

47.8k3122201




47.8k3122201










asked Nov 23 at 23:54









uhoh

34.4k17117429




34.4k17117429








  • 1




    I am going to taste a guess before looking up for references. I feel that surface features might be compared with the database of images from MRO, which might help in identifying the cardinal direction. Usually, the remote landing employs a camera to look directly below the probe, right from a altitude of few kilometers
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 2:44








  • 1




    @karthikeyan I have a hunch that you have good taste in guesses ;-) I think there are some other answers here about terrain-based navigation on Mars in general, that may have helpful resources.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 2:59










  • haha! It was a typo. I meant "I am going to TAKE a guess..". Anyways, thanks for the suggestions to look into. I'll start my hunt
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 3:11






  • 1




    there seems to be a lack of attitude related information! And I consider my camera backed answer as the resolutions from MRO and lander might be different.
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 5:43






  • 1




    Another possibility is to land while the Sun is at a low inclination close to the horizon and use this as a reference for direction.
    – asdfex
    Nov 24 at 14:16














  • 1




    I am going to taste a guess before looking up for references. I feel that surface features might be compared with the database of images from MRO, which might help in identifying the cardinal direction. Usually, the remote landing employs a camera to look directly below the probe, right from a altitude of few kilometers
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 2:44








  • 1




    @karthikeyan I have a hunch that you have good taste in guesses ;-) I think there are some other answers here about terrain-based navigation on Mars in general, that may have helpful resources.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 2:59










  • haha! It was a typo. I meant "I am going to TAKE a guess..". Anyways, thanks for the suggestions to look into. I'll start my hunt
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 3:11






  • 1




    there seems to be a lack of attitude related information! And I consider my camera backed answer as the resolutions from MRO and lander might be different.
    – karthikeyan
    Nov 24 at 5:43






  • 1




    Another possibility is to land while the Sun is at a low inclination close to the horizon and use this as a reference for direction.
    – asdfex
    Nov 24 at 14:16








1




1




I am going to taste a guess before looking up for references. I feel that surface features might be compared with the database of images from MRO, which might help in identifying the cardinal direction. Usually, the remote landing employs a camera to look directly below the probe, right from a altitude of few kilometers
– karthikeyan
Nov 24 at 2:44






I am going to taste a guess before looking up for references. I feel that surface features might be compared with the database of images from MRO, which might help in identifying the cardinal direction. Usually, the remote landing employs a camera to look directly below the probe, right from a altitude of few kilometers
– karthikeyan
Nov 24 at 2:44






1




1




@karthikeyan I have a hunch that you have good taste in guesses ;-) I think there are some other answers here about terrain-based navigation on Mars in general, that may have helpful resources.
– uhoh
Nov 24 at 2:59




@karthikeyan I have a hunch that you have good taste in guesses ;-) I think there are some other answers here about terrain-based navigation on Mars in general, that may have helpful resources.
– uhoh
Nov 24 at 2:59












haha! It was a typo. I meant "I am going to TAKE a guess..". Anyways, thanks for the suggestions to look into. I'll start my hunt
– karthikeyan
Nov 24 at 3:11




haha! It was a typo. I meant "I am going to TAKE a guess..". Anyways, thanks for the suggestions to look into. I'll start my hunt
– karthikeyan
Nov 24 at 3:11




1




1




there seems to be a lack of attitude related information! And I consider my camera backed answer as the resolutions from MRO and lander might be different.
– karthikeyan
Nov 24 at 5:43




there seems to be a lack of attitude related information! And I consider my camera backed answer as the resolutions from MRO and lander might be different.
– karthikeyan
Nov 24 at 5:43




1




1




Another possibility is to land while the Sun is at a low inclination close to the horizon and use this as a reference for direction.
– asdfex
Nov 24 at 14:16




Another possibility is to land while the Sun is at a low inclination close to the horizon and use this as a reference for direction.
– asdfex
Nov 24 at 14:16










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














By integrating inertial measurements, initialized from the final star tracking about 20 or 30 minutes earlier.



Also, from Spaceflight 101:




With the separation of the Cruise Stage seven minutes before re-entry, the InSight spacecraft solely relies on its MIMU for attitude propagation, rate measurement and the deceleration trigger for the critical parachute deployment event. Two redundant MIMUs reside on opposite sides of the lander, each comprising three QFLEX accelerometers for linear acceleration measurements along the three body axes and three Honeywell ring-laser gyros for angular rotation measurement.



The MIMU outputs data at 200 Hz including the accumulated linear velocity change and the accumulated angle change in three Cartesian axes. After digitization of the raw data, the MIMU achieves a delta-v resolution of 2.7 mm/sec at a noise level of under 0.08 mm/sec and angular data is delivered with a resolution of 0.011 deg/sec.




enter image description here



Honeywell MIMU – Credit: Honeywell Source






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:18










  • okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:35








  • 2




    @karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 24 at 7:38






  • 1




    @karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
    – uhoh
    Nov 25 at 6:09






  • 1




    Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 27 at 5:23











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














By integrating inertial measurements, initialized from the final star tracking about 20 or 30 minutes earlier.



Also, from Spaceflight 101:




With the separation of the Cruise Stage seven minutes before re-entry, the InSight spacecraft solely relies on its MIMU for attitude propagation, rate measurement and the deceleration trigger for the critical parachute deployment event. Two redundant MIMUs reside on opposite sides of the lander, each comprising three QFLEX accelerometers for linear acceleration measurements along the three body axes and three Honeywell ring-laser gyros for angular rotation measurement.



The MIMU outputs data at 200 Hz including the accumulated linear velocity change and the accumulated angle change in three Cartesian axes. After digitization of the raw data, the MIMU achieves a delta-v resolution of 2.7 mm/sec at a noise level of under 0.08 mm/sec and angular data is delivered with a resolution of 0.011 deg/sec.




enter image description here



Honeywell MIMU – Credit: Honeywell Source






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:18










  • okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:35








  • 2




    @karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 24 at 7:38






  • 1




    @karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
    – uhoh
    Nov 25 at 6:09






  • 1




    Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 27 at 5:23
















5














By integrating inertial measurements, initialized from the final star tracking about 20 or 30 minutes earlier.



Also, from Spaceflight 101:




With the separation of the Cruise Stage seven minutes before re-entry, the InSight spacecraft solely relies on its MIMU for attitude propagation, rate measurement and the deceleration trigger for the critical parachute deployment event. Two redundant MIMUs reside on opposite sides of the lander, each comprising three QFLEX accelerometers for linear acceleration measurements along the three body axes and three Honeywell ring-laser gyros for angular rotation measurement.



The MIMU outputs data at 200 Hz including the accumulated linear velocity change and the accumulated angle change in three Cartesian axes. After digitization of the raw data, the MIMU achieves a delta-v resolution of 2.7 mm/sec at a noise level of under 0.08 mm/sec and angular data is delivered with a resolution of 0.011 deg/sec.




enter image description here



Honeywell MIMU – Credit: Honeywell Source






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:18










  • okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:35








  • 2




    @karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 24 at 7:38






  • 1




    @karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
    – uhoh
    Nov 25 at 6:09






  • 1




    Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 27 at 5:23














5












5








5






By integrating inertial measurements, initialized from the final star tracking about 20 or 30 minutes earlier.



Also, from Spaceflight 101:




With the separation of the Cruise Stage seven minutes before re-entry, the InSight spacecraft solely relies on its MIMU for attitude propagation, rate measurement and the deceleration trigger for the critical parachute deployment event. Two redundant MIMUs reside on opposite sides of the lander, each comprising three QFLEX accelerometers for linear acceleration measurements along the three body axes and three Honeywell ring-laser gyros for angular rotation measurement.



The MIMU outputs data at 200 Hz including the accumulated linear velocity change and the accumulated angle change in three Cartesian axes. After digitization of the raw data, the MIMU achieves a delta-v resolution of 2.7 mm/sec at a noise level of under 0.08 mm/sec and angular data is delivered with a resolution of 0.011 deg/sec.




enter image description here



Honeywell MIMU – Credit: Honeywell Source






share|improve this answer














By integrating inertial measurements, initialized from the final star tracking about 20 or 30 minutes earlier.



Also, from Spaceflight 101:




With the separation of the Cruise Stage seven minutes before re-entry, the InSight spacecraft solely relies on its MIMU for attitude propagation, rate measurement and the deceleration trigger for the critical parachute deployment event. Two redundant MIMUs reside on opposite sides of the lander, each comprising three QFLEX accelerometers for linear acceleration measurements along the three body axes and three Honeywell ring-laser gyros for angular rotation measurement.



The MIMU outputs data at 200 Hz including the accumulated linear velocity change and the accumulated angle change in three Cartesian axes. After digitization of the raw data, the MIMU achieves a delta-v resolution of 2.7 mm/sec at a noise level of under 0.08 mm/sec and angular data is delivered with a resolution of 0.011 deg/sec.




enter image description here



Honeywell MIMU – Credit: Honeywell Source







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 25 at 6:08









uhoh

34.4k17117429




34.4k17117429










answered Nov 24 at 4:12









Mark Adler

47.8k3122201




47.8k3122201








  • 1




    Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:18










  • okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:35








  • 2




    @karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 24 at 7:38






  • 1




    @karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
    – uhoh
    Nov 25 at 6:09






  • 1




    Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 27 at 5:23














  • 1




    Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:18










  • okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
    – uhoh
    Nov 24 at 4:35








  • 2




    @karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 24 at 7:38






  • 1




    @karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
    – uhoh
    Nov 25 at 6:09






  • 1




    Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
    – Mark Adler
    Nov 27 at 5:23








1




1




Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
– uhoh
Nov 24 at 4:18




Life would be so much easier if we had two, dissimilar Suns.
– uhoh
Nov 24 at 4:18












okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
– uhoh
Nov 24 at 4:35






okay then: Why are InSight's two RISE horns pointed slightly south of east, and north of west?
– uhoh
Nov 24 at 4:35






2




2




@karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
– Mark Adler
Nov 24 at 7:38




@karthikeyan No. It's a tactical-grade IMU.
– Mark Adler
Nov 24 at 7:38




1




1




@karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
– uhoh
Nov 25 at 6:09




@karthikeyan I've added a bit more information on the two IMUs.
– uhoh
Nov 25 at 6:09




1




1




Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
– Mark Adler
Nov 27 at 5:23




Very nice. @uhoh should get the credit for this answer.
– Mark Adler
Nov 27 at 5:23


















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