As a crucial initial step in humanity’s quest to explore deep space, lunar transfer missions have garnered significant attention. The escalating demand for increased payload capacity and mission flexibility have presented challenges in terms of mission fuel costs. In response, the design of low-energy lunar transfer trajectories, rooted in multibody dynamics, has become paramount for deep space exploration trajectory design. This paper summarizes the design methods for transfer trajectories from the Earth to the Moon and even deeper space that consume low energy at the expense of expanded transfer time. The fundamental design methods include the weak stability boundary method, the chaos control method, and the invariant manifold theory, which are primarily determined by dynamical mechanisms. Additionally, the paper discusses the low-thrust technique, formulating trajectory design as an optimization problem to tailor thrust profiles for minimum fuel consumption. Finally, landmark missions are discussed to demonstrate the practical applications and advantages of low-energy trajectories, spanning lunar missions to exploration within deeper space regions.
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Wanli Zhao
Jixin Ding
Xue Bai
Beijing Institute of Technology
Beihang University
China Academy of Space Technology
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Zhao et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8948f6c1944d70ce05899 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/astronautics1020009