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Optimal Control and Neural Porkchop Analysis for Low-Thrust Asteroid Rendezvous Mission

Zhong Zhang, Niccolò Michelotti, Gonçalo Oliveira Pinho, Yilin Zou, Francesco Topputo

Abstract

This paper presents a comparative study of the applicability and accuracy of optimal control methods and neural network-based estimators in the context of porkchop plots for preliminary asteroid rendezvous mission design. The scenario considered involves a deep-space CubeSat equipped with a low-thrust engine, departing from Earth and rendezvousing with a near-Earth asteroid within a three-year launch window. A low-thrust trajectory optimization model is formulated, incorporating variable specific impulse, maximum thrust, and path constraints. The optimal control problem is efficiently solved using Sequential Convex Programming (SCP) combined with a solution continuation strategy. The neural network framework consists of two models: one predicts the minimum fuel consumption ($Δv$), while the other estimates the minimum flight time ($Δt$) which is used to assess transfer feasibility. Case results demonstrate that, in simplified scenarios without path constraints, the neural network approach achieves low relative errors across most of the design space and successfully captures the main structural features of the porkchop plots. In cases where the SCP-based continuation method fails due to the presence of multiple local optima, the neural network still provides smooth and globally consistent predictions, significantly improving the efficiency of early-stage asteroid candidate screening. However, the deformation of the feasible region caused by path constraints leads to noticeable discrepancies in certain boundary regions, thereby limiting the applicability of the network in detailed mission design phases. Overall, the integration of neural networks with porkchop plot analysis offers an effective decision-making tool for mission designers and planetary scientists, with significant potential for engineering applications.

Optimal Control and Neural Porkchop Analysis for Low-Thrust Asteroid Rendezvous Mission

Abstract

This paper presents a comparative study of the applicability and accuracy of optimal control methods and neural network-based estimators in the context of porkchop plots for preliminary asteroid rendezvous mission design. The scenario considered involves a deep-space CubeSat equipped with a low-thrust engine, departing from Earth and rendezvousing with a near-Earth asteroid within a three-year launch window. A low-thrust trajectory optimization model is formulated, incorporating variable specific impulse, maximum thrust, and path constraints. The optimal control problem is efficiently solved using Sequential Convex Programming (SCP) combined with a solution continuation strategy. The neural network framework consists of two models: one predicts the minimum fuel consumption (), while the other estimates the minimum flight time () which is used to assess transfer feasibility. Case results demonstrate that, in simplified scenarios without path constraints, the neural network approach achieves low relative errors across most of the design space and successfully captures the main structural features of the porkchop plots. In cases where the SCP-based continuation method fails due to the presence of multiple local optima, the neural network still provides smooth and globally consistent predictions, significantly improving the efficiency of early-stage asteroid candidate screening. However, the deformation of the feasible region caused by path constraints leads to noticeable discrepancies in certain boundary regions, thereby limiting the applicability of the network in detailed mission design phases. Overall, the integration of neural networks with porkchop plot analysis offers an effective decision-making tool for mission designers and planetary scientists, with significant potential for engineering applications.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 11 sections, 17 equations, 12 figures, 3 tables.

Figures (12)

  • Figure S1: Variable $T_{\rm max}$ and $I_{\rm sp}$ curves with respect to the distance from the Sun.
  • Figure S2: Connecting trajectories for computing multi-revolution transfers.
  • Figure S3: Orbits of selected asteroids. Credits: ESA NEO Toolkit
  • Figure S4: Porkchop plot for the 2012 LA Asteroid.
  • Figure S5: Porkchop plot for the 2008 ST Asteroid.
  • ...and 7 more figures