Andrew Robertson's Homepage

Andrew D. Robertson

Ph.D. Candidate Stanford University Department of Aeronautics & Astronautics
Durand Room 010B, E-mail: adr@leland.stanford.edu


Work Experience

I have worked (on and off) at Hughes Aircraft Company's Space and Communications Group since June 1992. I am presently on leave to pursue my PhD at Stanford. I worked for General Electric Astro Space (now part of Lockheed Martin) during the summers of 1990 and 1991. Please see my resume for more information.

I spent the summer of 1994 and the first half of 1995 working on the MSAT spacecraft at Hughes. Specifically, I worked on a stabilizing attitude control system for MSAT during transfer orbit. I was also a member of the mission team during launch and transfer orbit.


Research Interests

My research advisor is Professor Jon How, who is also co-director of the Stanford Aerospace Robotics Laboratory My project is Spacecraft Formation Flying: Theory and Experiment. This work was originally motivated by the NASA Space Technology 3 mission (formerly called Deep Space 3). My research has been supported by a NASA Graduate Student Research Program grant from JPL.

My thesis work investigates new technologies for spacecraft formation flying which is an enabling technology for a new class of space missions. These missions will combine measurements from science instruments on separate spacecraft to achieve new levels of high resolution. This concept - called the virtual spacecraft bus - allows far more flexibility and observing baselines limited only by the control system and available fuel. Formation flying technologies (including: relative sensing, control, high-level autonomy, fuel-optimal trajectory planning, and increasingly precise successive levels of instrument alignment control) will enable virtual spacecraft bus missions for synthetic aperture radar, separated spacecraft interferometry for astrometry and astronomy, gravity wave detection, and more.

I work in the Stanford University Aerospace Robotics Lab (ARL). My work includes theory, simulation and experiments on our spacecraft formation flying testbed which includes three self-contained air cushion vehicles with cold gas thrusters, reaction wheels and on-board computing. These vehicles can be tracked using our indoor GPS system or an overhead vision system. More information (including some movies) can be found at the ARL web site.


ARL's free flying space robot testbed


Education

I grew up in New York City and went to Stuyvesant High School. My undergraduate education was at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts where I received an BS in Aeronautics and Astronautics - Avionics in 1993. I received an MS in Aeronautics and Astronautics from Stanford in January 1995; that degree was supported by a Hughes Masters Fellowship. I am presently finishing up my PhD thesis at Stanford. My PhD has been supported by a NASA GSRP Fellowship.


Favorite web sites

New York Times
Mac news
Linux for Mac/PPC
NY Jets news
NY Knicks schedule
Dave Barry
Dilbert

Last updated 3/00, by adr