Paper
28 July 2000 Low-cost attitude determination system and imager with embedded compression
Jeffrey W. Percival, B. Babler, R. Bonomo, S. Gabelt, Walter M. Harris, Kurt P. Jaehnig, Donald E. Michalski, Kenneth H. Nordsieck
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Space Astronomy Laboratory has built and flown a very- low-cost (approximately 50K) star tracker and digital imaging system with embedded compression. The star tracker is suitable for all rocket and spacecraft applications, and provides pitch, yaw, and roll updates at rates up to 10 Hz. The digital imaging subsystem uses a novel NASA-funded scheme of `progressive image transmission' in which the image is sent out over a very-low-bandwidth channel, such as a telemetry downlink, in such a way that it can be reconstructed `on the fly' and updated as more data arrive. Large (768 X 474) useful images can be obtained over a 4- kbit/s downlink in as little as 10 seconds. This device can act as an aspect camera, a deployment monitor, or a science imager in situations where low bandwidth is desired or high bandwidth is not available.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jeffrey W. Percival, B. Babler, R. Bonomo, S. Gabelt, Walter M. Harris, Kurt P. Jaehnig, Donald E. Michalski, and Kenneth H. Nordsieck "Low-cost attitude determination system and imager with embedded compression", Proc. SPIE 4013, UV, Optical, and IR Space Telescopes and Instruments, (28 July 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.394039
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KEYWORDS
Stars

Image compression

Image transmission

Digital imaging

Space operations

Imaging systems

Rockets

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