Master thesis and internship[BR]- [BR]-
Azouar, Mohamed
Promotor(s) :
Kerschen, Gaëtan
Date of defense : 23-Jan-2026 • Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/25233
Details
| Title : | Master thesis and internship[BR]- [BR]- |
| Translated title : | [fr] Développement de modèles physiques pour la simulation de la dynamique d’un lanceur |
| Author : | Azouar, Mohamed
|
| Date of defense : | 23-Jan-2026 |
| Advisor(s) : | Kerschen, Gaëtan
|
| Committee's member(s) : | Blanquez, Daniel
Jacques, Lionel
|
| Language : | English |
| Number of pages : | 83 |
| Discipline(s) : | Engineering, computing & technology > Aerospace & aeronautics engineering |
| Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
| Degree: | Master en ingénieur civil en aérospatiale, à finalité spécialisée en "aerospace engineering" |
| Faculty: | Master thesis of the Faculté des Sciences appliquées |
Abstract
[en] This thesis presents the development and integration of a set of physical models for launch
vehicle dynamics simulation within an existing simulation framework used at Spacebel. The work focuses on
improving the representation of the physical environment and the associated forces acting on
the vehicle, with particular emphasis on atmosphere, aerodynamics, and gravity.
A modular modeling approach is adopted, in which new environment and force computation
blocks are implemented and coupled with the vehicle dynamics. The developments include the
implementation of an atmospheric model with stochastic turbulence based on the Dryden
formulation, the computation of aerodynamic angles and loads, and improvements in the
handling of kinematics, reference frames, attitude dynamics, and gravity modeling. The implemented models are
verified through unit tests and consistency checks in order to ensure their physical
validity and numerical robustness.
In a second step, the impact of atmospheric disturbances on the vehicle response is
investigated. Deterministic sensitivity analyses are first carried out to assess the
influence of key parameters such as turbulence intensity and mean wind magnitude. Then,
Monte Carlo simulations are performed to quantify the statistical dispersion of critical
aerodynamic quantities, including the angle of attack, sideslip angle, dynamic pressure,
and lateral aerodynamic force.
The results show that the turbulence intensity mainly affects fluctuation-related metrics, while steady wind components and stochastic realizations can significantly modify the flight conditions at which peak loads occur. In particular, lateral aerodynamic quantities exhibit a very large variability across realizations, and rare but more severe cases are observed. These results highlight the strongly nonlinear nature of the coupled atmosphere--aerodynamics--dynamics system.
Overall, this work provides a consistent extension of Spacebel's simulation framework and
demonstrates its capability to support physically sound modeling and uncertainty-aware analyses
for launch vehicle dynamics simulation.
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Thesis_AZOUAR.pdf