Abstract. The second mission of the small expendable deployment system (SEDS-II) followed the successful mission of SEDS-I, which deployed freely a small instrumented probe on a 20-km tether. Unlike SEDS-I, the deployment of SEDS-II was controlled to provide a small libration amplitude and tether velocity at the end of deployment. The preflight goal for SEDS-II was a maximum libration of less than 10 deg and a final velocity of less than 1 m/s. The control problem was made difficult by the limited capabilities of the SEDS sensors and onboard computer and the large uncertainties inherent in the response of the actuator (brake) and the plant (deployer). The nonlinear, nonautonomous control problem is divided in two parts by using a numerical...