TY - JOUR
T1 - Intention Recognition of Maneuvering Spacecraft Cluster Using MIC-Net
AU - Tong, Xuduo
AU - Cai, Han
AU - Hu, Andong
AU - Zhang, Jingrui
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1965-2011 IEEE.
PY - 2025/10
Y1 - 2025/10
N2 - Spacecraft clusters play a crucial role in space missions. Accurately identifying their motion intentions is essential for reducing collision risks and enhancing space traffic management. However, current research on spacecraft cluster intention recognition remains limited. To address this gap, we define 11 representative motion intentions for spacecraft clusters and construct eight maneuvering scenarios through the application of impulse maneuvers. Intention recognition under maneuvering conditions poses additional challenges due to frequent state changes, varying intentions, and increased complexity. To tackle these issues, we propose a maneuvering intention and cluster analysis network (MIC-Net). This three-layer network architecture effectively decomposes the problem and enables reliable cluster intention recognition. The MIC-Net contains three layers, i.e., maneuver layer, intention layer, and cluster layer, which, respectively, use the interacting multiple model with labeled multi-Bernoulli (IMM-LMB) algorithm and the bidirectional gated recurrent unit multihead attention (BiGRU-Multi-Head Attention) neural network. The IMM-LMB algorithm enables the detection of maneuvers in multiple targets while maintaining robust and efficient state estimation. The BiGRU-Multi-Head Attention neural network model is capable of classifying time-series data and demonstrates strong generalization ability. This approach is then applied to perform intention recognition and cluster identification. In the simulation section, the reliability and robustness of MIC-Net are verified through eight maneuvering scenarios of spacecraft cluster. Meanwhile, the results also demonstrate the superiority of BiGRU-Multi-Head Attention in terms of both accuracy and loss function compared with other methods for single-target intention recognition. The proposed neural network is further applied to cluster identification tasks, achieving high classification accuracy.
AB - Spacecraft clusters play a crucial role in space missions. Accurately identifying their motion intentions is essential for reducing collision risks and enhancing space traffic management. However, current research on spacecraft cluster intention recognition remains limited. To address this gap, we define 11 representative motion intentions for spacecraft clusters and construct eight maneuvering scenarios through the application of impulse maneuvers. Intention recognition under maneuvering conditions poses additional challenges due to frequent state changes, varying intentions, and increased complexity. To tackle these issues, we propose a maneuvering intention and cluster analysis network (MIC-Net). This three-layer network architecture effectively decomposes the problem and enables reliable cluster intention recognition. The MIC-Net contains three layers, i.e., maneuver layer, intention layer, and cluster layer, which, respectively, use the interacting multiple model with labeled multi-Bernoulli (IMM-LMB) algorithm and the bidirectional gated recurrent unit multihead attention (BiGRU-Multi-Head Attention) neural network. The IMM-LMB algorithm enables the detection of maneuvers in multiple targets while maintaining robust and efficient state estimation. The BiGRU-Multi-Head Attention neural network model is capable of classifying time-series data and demonstrates strong generalization ability. This approach is then applied to perform intention recognition and cluster identification. In the simulation section, the reliability and robustness of MIC-Net are verified through eight maneuvering scenarios of spacecraft cluster. Meanwhile, the results also demonstrate the superiority of BiGRU-Multi-Head Attention in terms of both accuracy and loss function compared with other methods for single-target intention recognition. The proposed neural network is further applied to cluster identification tasks, achieving high classification accuracy.
KW - Maneuver detection
KW - motion intention recognition
KW - neural network
KW - spacecraft cluster
UR - http://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105007606722
U2 - 10.1109/TAES.2025.3576763
DO - 10.1109/TAES.2025.3576763
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105007606722
SN - 0018-9251
VL - 61
SP - 13286
EP - 13304
JO - IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems
JF - IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems
IS - 5
ER -