Basic Principles of Inertial Navigation
Basic Principles of Inertial Navigation
Basic Principles of Inertial Navigation
A few definitions
Inertia is the property of bodies to maintain constant translational and rotational velocity, unless disturbed by forces or torques, respectively (Newtons first law of motion). An inertial reference frame is a coordinate frame in which Newtons laws of motion are valid. Inertial reference frames are neither rotating nor accelerating. Inertial sensors measure rotation rate and acceleration, both of which are vectorvalued variables. Gyroscopes are sensors for measuring rotation: rate gyroscopes measure rotation rate, and integrating gyroscopes (also called whole-angle gyroscopes) measure rotation angle. Accelerometers are sensors for measuring acceleration. However, accelerometers cannot measure gravitational acceleration. That is, an accelerometer in free fall (or in orbit) has no detectable input. The input axis of an inertial sensor defines which vector component it measures. Multi-axis sensors measure more than one component. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) or inertial reference unit (IRU) contains a cluster of sensors: accelerometers (three or more, but usually three) and gyroscopes (three or more, but usually three). These sensors are rigidly mounted to a common base to maintain the same relative orientation.
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The original applications of INS technology used stable platform techniques. In such systems, the inertial sensors are mounted on a stable platform and mechanically isolated from the rotational motion of the vehicle. Platform systems are still in use, particularly for those applications requiring very accurate estimates of navigation data, such as ships and submarines. Modern systems have removed most of the mechanical complexity of platform systems by having the sensors attached rigidly, or strapped down, to the body of the host vehicle. The potential benefits of this approach are lower cost, reduced size, and greater reliability compared with equivalent platform systems. The major disadvantage is a substantial increase in computing complexity.
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Gimbaled systems
A gimbal is a rigid with rotation bearings for isolating the inside of the frame from external rotations about the bearing axes. At least three gimbals are required to isolate a subsystem from host vehicle rotations about three axes, typically labeled roll, pitch, and yaw axes. The gimbals in an INS are mounted inside one another. Gimbals and torque servos are used to null out the rotation of stable platform on which the inertial sensors are mounted.
Strapdown INS
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Advantages of INS
It is autonomous and does not rely on any external aids or visibility conditions. It can operate in tunnels or underwater as well as anywhere else. It is inherently well suited for integrated navigation, guidance, and control of the host vehicle. Its IMU measures the derivatives of the variables to be controlled (e.g., position, velocity, and attitude). It is immune to jamming and inherently stealthy. It neither receivers nor emits detectable radiation and requires no external antenna that might be detectable by radar.
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Disadvantages of INS
Mean-squared navigation errors increase with time. Cost, including:
Acquisition cost, which can be an order of magnitude (or more) higher than GPS receivers. Operations cost, including the crew actions and time required for initializing position and attitude. Time required for initializing INS attitude by gyrocompass alignment is measured in minutes. TTFF for GPS receivers is measured in seconds. Maintenance cost. Electromechanical avionics systems (e.g., INS) tend to have higher failure rates and repair cost than purely electronic avionics systems (e.g., GPS).
Size and weight, which have been shrinking Power requirements, which have been shrinking along with size and weight but are still higher than those for GPS receivers. Heat dissipation, which is proportional to and shrinking with power requirements.
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Mechanical sensors: principles of operation, sources of error, typical performance characteristics, examples of commonly used accelerometers. MEMS accelerometers: principles of operation, sources of error, typical performance characteristics, examples
Gyroscope technology. Optical sensors: RLG: Principles of operation, lock-in phenomenon, sources of error, typical performance characteristics, recent developments, examples. FOG: Principles of operation, sources of error, typical performance characteristics, recent developments, examples
Application of Kalman filter to aided INS. The system equations. The measurement equations. Velocity, position, and attitude correction Loosely coupled INS/GPS Tightly coupled INS/GPS
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