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Journal ArticleDOI

Robust finite-time guidance against maneuverable targets with unpredictable evasive strategies

01 Jun 2018-Aerospace Science and Technology (Elsevier BV)-Vol. 77, pp 534-544
TL;DR: Based on homogeneity technique, the local finite-time input-to-state stability is established for the closed-loop guidance system, thus implying the proposed RFTG law can quickly render the LOS rate within a bounded error throughout intercept.
About: This article is published in Aerospace Science and Technology.The article was published on 2018-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 9 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Observer (quantum physics) & Guidance system.

Summary (2 min read)

1. Introduction

  • Interception of a maneuverable target is one of essential questions in the study of homing guidance.
  • This new guidance problem is referred to as Unpredictable Maneuverable Target Interception (UMTI) herein; that is, the interceptor cannot predict the evasive strategy of the target.
  • The CFTDO is designed to estimate the disturbances that are the e↵ects of the target maneuvers by making the observation-error dynamics behave as a second-order homogeneous system.
  • Note that the robustness of these two guidance laws is routinely guaranteed by the sliding mode control or the high-gain control.
  • As discussed previously, these two control methods have their own drawbacks when adopted in the UMTI.

2. Problem formulation

  • The design and analysis of the RFTG law is based on the following assumptions: Assumption 1. a M and a T are acceleration of the interceptor and the target, respectively.
  • $ represents the deterministic yet unknown maneuvers, such as an artificial-intelligence model and an eventtrigger-based model.
  • A specific target maneuver model concerning (6) is given in Section 5.1 to assess the guidance performance of the proposed guidance law.

3. Robust finite-time guidance design

  • The RFTG law is presented: first, the CFTDO is designed to estimate the e↵ect of the target maneuvers; second, the integrated CFTDO/BCFTS strategy is proposed to robustly stabilize the LOS rate.
  • If = ↵, this integrated CFTDO/BCFTS strategy has two advantages.
  • The disturbances must be completely canceled by the observer in finite time, and then the finite-time controller is designed based on this zeroobservation-error assumption.
  • From the perspective of guidance performance, the RMP-GLs can achieve various optimal performance needs, while, except terminal constraints, the MS-GLs cannot attain other guidance performance needs.
  • Furthermore, by examining the function ( ,!, d̂ T ), the non-smooth feedback control c 1 r|!|↵ sgn(!) can lead to a large magnitude of the guidance command and likely cause the control saturation to happen at the start of the intercept.

4. Convergence analysis of LOS rate

  • This section presents the main theoretical results of the proposed RFTG law.
  • Then, the zero solution of the closed-loop guidance system (17) is locally finite-time stable.
  • Next, the authors establish the corresponding convergence of the LOS rate.
  • The objective of dealing with the control saturation in these two guidance laws is to enable the adaptive laws to work so that the parameters of the target maneuvers can be e↵ectively estimated.
  • Admittedly, a number of assumptions are made for the system states in Theorem 3.

5. Simulations

  • Numerical comparison results for the RFTG law and the other three guidance laws are presented.
  • In the simulation, the interceptor’s initial position is set at the origin, its initial velocity is 1000m/s, and its initial flight path angle is 50 deg.
  • In addition, the divergence of the AGL that begins at approximately 5 s is caused by the parameter adaption.
  • Figure 1d depicts the flight trajectories, and, correspondingly, table 1 gives the homing accuracy of the four guidance laws, demonstrating homing precision of the RFTG law is better than that of the other three in the presence of the target maneuver.
  • As described in Figs. 3c and 3d, the LOS rate in Case 7 is quickly nullified after the sudden change of the target maneuver at 5 s, while the LOS rate in Case 8 is stabilized through a relative large transient period due to the control saturation, which is the adverse impact of the large magnitude of the target acceleration.

6. Conclusion

  • The integrated continuous finite-time disturbance observer /bounded continuous finitetime stabilizer strategy is proposed to approach the problem of intercepting a maneuvering target with an unpredictable evasive strategy.
  • The local FTISS of the proposed RFTG law is established in the case of the bounded derivative of the e↵ect of the target maneuver.
  • Numerical comparisons demonstrate the favorable guidance performance of the RFTG law in terms of the homing accuracy and the estimation of the e↵ect of the target maneuver.
  • Furthermore, the RFTG law can e↵ectively stabilizes the LOS rate in the presence of the control saturation, and achieve the high-precision miss-distances in the four typical cases of the unpredictable maneuverable target interception.

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Citations
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01 Nov 1981
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the effect of local derivatives on the detection of intensity edges in images, where the local difference of intensities is computed for each pixel in the image.
Abstract: Most of the signal processing that we will study in this course involves local operations on a signal, namely transforming the signal by applying linear combinations of values in the neighborhood of each sample point. You are familiar with such operations from Calculus, namely, taking derivatives and you are also familiar with this from optics namely blurring a signal. We will be looking at sampled signals only. Let's start with a few basic examples. Local difference Suppose we have a 1D image and we take the local difference of intensities, DI(x) = 1 2 (I(x + 1) − I(x − 1)) which give a discrete approximation to a partial derivative. (We compute this for each x in the image.) What is the effect of such a transformation? One key idea is that such a derivative would be useful for marking positions where the intensity changes. Such a change is called an edge. It is important to detect edges in images because they often mark locations at which object properties change. These can include changes in illumination along a surface due to a shadow boundary, or a material (pigment) change, or a change in depth as when one object ends and another begins. The computational problem of finding intensity edges in images is called edge detection. We could look for positions at which DI(x) has a large negative or positive value. Large positive values indicate an edge that goes from low to high intensity, and large negative values indicate an edge that goes from high to low intensity. Example Suppose the image consists of a single (slightly sloped) edge:

1,829 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A robust guidance law considering autopilot dynamics for maneuvering target interception in three-dimensional environment and terminal angle constraints is proposed and an adaptive second-order sliding mode observer is presented whose design parameters can be adjusted autonomously according to the estimation error.

39 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Interceptor using norm differential game guidance laws is able to pursue the spacecraft without being intercepted by defender, even though the maneuverability of both interceptor and protector is lower than defender.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A relative Line-of-Sight (LOS) velocity based finite-time three-dimensional guidance law design framework is presented, and the application of fixed-time convergence disturbance observer in this framework is discussed.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Robust Generalized Dynamic Inversion system supersedes its counterparts in accomplishing direct collision and hit-to-kill HG interception requirements, demonstrating its high-level performance abilities and robustness attributes against agile target maneuvers in the presence of uncertainties, disturbances, and measurement noises.

9 citations

References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new adaptive nonlinear guidance law for homing missiles to intercept maneuvering targets in terminal phase is proposed, which generates smooth acceleration commands and is able to stabilize the relative lateral velocity in a desired finite time.

20 citations


"Robust finite-time guidance against..." refers background in this paper

  • ...As such, the control saturation and the speed of the parameter adaptation are two fundamental concerns in adaptive control design [8, 9, 10]....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The resulting game theoretic guidance law with miss-distance as the cost, is nonlinear, aligned along the zero-effort-miss (ZEM) direction, and the time-to-go is a solution of a quartic polynomial equation in feedback form.
Abstract: This paper presents a nonlinear 3D-vector guidance law. It is based on kinematic vector equations, where the commanded thrust is bounded, and the interceptor does not know the target evasive strategy. The resulting game theoretic guidance law with miss-distance as the cost, is nonlinear, aligned along the zero-effort-miss (ZEM) direction, and the time-to-go is a solution of a quartic polynomial equation in feedback form. This time-to-go is the actual one provided both players play optimal. If the evader does not play optimal, capture occurs earlier. Moreover, optimal strategies in line-of-sight (LOS) coordinates are also presented. It is found that these strategies are functions of the range, range rate, and the LOS rate. Simulations demonstrate the possibility of a miss at the first pass, but eventual capture.

13 citations


"Robust finite-time guidance against..." refers background or methods in this paper

  • ...For example, in [6], assuming an explicit model of the target maneuver and a first-order missile dynamics, the interception problem is formulated as a linear quadratic control problem; in [4], a nonlinear 3D-vector guidance law is designed, which is an optimal strategy pair in the sense of the saddle-point inequality....

    [...]

  • ...The existing evasive strategies consist of conventional maneuver models [1, 2] and optimal evasive strategies [3, 4, 5]....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a planar engagement between a maneuvering target and a homing missile is considered, and the optimal evasion strategy has a bang-bang form, where the direction of a maximal acceleration command depends on the sign of the switching function and the zero-effort miss distance in the switched system.
Abstract: A planar engagement between a maneuvering target and a homing missile is considered. It is assumed that, during the engagement, the missile carries out multiple switches from one linear guidance law to another, choosing from a prescribed set of guidance laws. This leads to a formulation of a hybrid evasion problem for the target. In the case of complete information on the missile’s strategies and switch moments, the optimal evasion strategy has a bang–bang form. The direction of a maximal acceleration command depends on the sign of a switching function and the sign of the zero-effort miss distance in the switched system. In the case of unknown switch moments, a matrix game is formulated, yielding the maximin evasion strategy, which implies the same bang–bang structure of evasive maneuver and guarantees a miss distance not smaller than the lower game value. Employing an optimal mixed evasion strategy guarantees better results on average. Examples where both the missile and the target have first-order stric...

13 citations


"Robust finite-time guidance against..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...The existing evasive strategies consist of conventional maneuver models [1, 2] and optimal evasive strategies [3, 4, 5]....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new estimator-guidance law for a bounded acceleration interceptor pursuing a target performing a sudden step maneuver is presented, for a linearized end-game scenario is investigated.
Abstract: A new estimator-guidance law is presented, for a bounded acceleration interceptor pursuing a target performing a sudden step maneuver. The linearized end-game scenario is investigated. The missile’s acceleration saturation is represented by the equivalent random input describing function. The estimator proposed for this problem features a mechanism constructed to e‐ciently identify a sudden target maneuver. Due to the bound on the missile acceleration, the certainty equivalence property is not valid, and so, the resulting controller (guidance law) depends on the measurement noise level, statistics of the target maneuver, and the saturation limit. The derivation of this guidance law proceeds in two stages. In the flrst simplifled stage, it is assumed that the instance that the target issues a step command in its acceleration is known. However, the size of the target maneuver jump must still be estimated. Simulation results show signiflcant improvement over the deterministic optimal guidance law when the jump times vary from 10 to 3 missile time constants prior to the intercept time. If the jump occurs earlier or later than this duration no improvement is gained. In the second stage, a suboptimal guidance law is derived using the multiple model adaptive control formulation for a target performing a single step maneuver near the intercept time. Note that this sub-optimal guidance law does not require a-priory knowledge of the time of the jump in the target acceleration command. Performance improvement of the same order of magnitude as was observed for the known jump time scheme (that also serves as a performance bound) is achieved, verifying the validity of this approach. Sensitivity analysis to various noise levels and expected target maneuvers was carried out emphasizing the robustness and advantages of this scheme.

13 citations


"Robust finite-time guidance against..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...The existing evasive strategies consist of conventional maneuver models [1, 2] and optimal evasive strategies [3, 4, 5]....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI

11 citations


"Robust finite-time guidance against..." refers background in this paper

  • ...In such a situation, the time-invariant second-order linear system used in [7] is not proper [32]....

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (11)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Robust finite-time guidance against maneuverable targets with unpredictable evasive strategies" ?

This paper presents a robust finite-time guidance ( RFTG ) law to a short-range interception problem. By robustly stabilizing a line-of-sight rate, this paper proposes an integrated continuous finite-time disturbance observer/bounded continuous finite-time stabilizer strategy. Moreover, convergence properties of the LOS rate in the presence of control saturation are discussed. 

The design tools mainly consist of adaptive control, sliding mode control, high-gain control, etc. In [7],Preprint submitted to Aerospace Science and Technology April 3, 2018the authors parameterize upper bounds of the target acceleration and then develop the resulting parameter adaptive laws, thus handling the target maneuver. 

To achieve intercept, three conditions are needed: ! = 0, sin(M )a Msin( T )a T , and ṙ0 < 0, where ṙ 0 is the initial interceptor-target range rate. 

The objective of dealing with the control saturation in these two guidance laws is to enable the adaptive laws to work so that the parameters of the target maneuvers can be e↵ectively estimated. 

As such, the control saturation and the speed of the parameter adaptation are two fundamental concerns in adaptive control design [8, 9, 10]. 

A fast adaptive guidance law in [11] induces an auxiliary signal to prevent the control saturation from destroying the parameter adaptation. 

0. Using LaSalle’s invariance theorem, the zero solution of the observation-error dynamics (13) is globally asymptotically stable. 

In the simulation, the interceptor’s initial position is set at the origin, its initial velocity is 1000m/s, and its initial flight path angle is 50 deg. 

As described in Figs. 3c and 3d, the LOS rate in Case 7 is quickly nullified after the sudden change of the target maneuver at 5 s, while the LOS rate in Case 8 is stabilized through a relative large transient period due to the control saturation, which is the adverse impact of the large magnitude of the target acceleration. 

Using the RFTG law (10), together with = ↵, the closed-loop closed-loop LOS rate dynamics are given by!̇ = c 1 |!|↵ sgn(!) + e d ,ė! 

Although the adaptive guidance laws work well in the above-mentioned scenarios, they have three drawbacks herein: 1) the guidance performance heavily depends on the convergence of adaptive parameters, while these parameters are easily prone to diverge when the jerk of the maneuverable target is considerable; 2) the robustness to the target maneuver relies on the parameterization of the target maneuver, while it is very hard to accurately parameterize the target maneuver under study; 3) the order of the closed-loop guidance system will inevitably increase as the dimension of the adaptive parameters grows.