Inertial Navigation Systems
Inertial Navigation Systems
Inertial Navigation Systems
INTRODUCTION
The field of inertial navigation is a well-established field of study and yet extends. The first inertial sensors
were developed and tested by rocket designers such as Robert Goddard and Wernher von Braun in the
early 1930s. Later inertial sensors technology was perfected by institutions such as Drapers Labs,
creating the first Inertial Navigation Systems. Inertial navigation made possible many of the great
achievements such as use with the advent of spacecraft, guided missiles, and commercial airliners.
BASICS
The basic principle behind inertial navigation is straightforward. Starting from a known point, you calculate
your present position from the direction and speed traveled since starting navigation. Generally this
process is known as dead reckoning.
Dead Reckoning is a type of navigation from a known starting point and then, by using vector
information (direction and speed) against a clock, an estimate of the current position can be made.
MEASUREMENT
The difference between other navigation systems and inertial systems is how it determines direction,
distances, and velocities. Inertial systems come in all shapes and sizes, but one thing they have in
common though is their use of multiple inertial sensors, and some form of central processing unit to keep
track of the measurements coming from those sensors.
We can highlight 5 basic components of typical inertial systems:
ACCELEROMETERS
Acceleration-measuring devices are the heart of all inertial systems. It is important that they function
reliably for all manoeuvres within the capability of the aircraft.
As you can guess from their name, accelerometers measure acceleration, not velocity.
Very slight accelerations and changes in heading in all directions must be detected.
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LINEAR ACCELEROMETER
The simplest type of linear accelerometer consists of a pendulous mass that is free to rotate about a pivot
axis in the instrument. There is an electrical pickoff that converts the rotation of the pendulous mass about
its pivot axis into an output signal.Since the signal is proportional to the measured acceleration, it is sent to
the navigation computer as an acceleration output signal.
To obtain acceleration in all directions, three accelerometers are mounted mutually perpendicular in a
fixed orientation.
GYROSCOPES
Accelerometers are great at measuring straight line motion, but they are no good at rotation — that’s
where gyroscopes come in. Gyros don’t care about linear motion at all, only rotation.
Gyroscopes are used in inertial systems to measure angular acceleration and changes in
orientation and heading.
Over the years of usage and research the original gimbaled gyroscopes have been replaced by newer
designs. Let's briefly talk about them.
GIMBALED GYROSCOPES
In a traditional sense, a gyroscope employs one or more spinning rotors held in a gimbal or suspended in
some other system that is designed to isolate it from external torque. That type of gyroscope works
because once the rotor is spinning, it wants to maintain its axis or rotation.
A gimbal uses a number of concentric rings mounted inside one another that are connected via
orthogonally arranged pivots. This design allows the gyro to freely rotate in three-axes.
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These gimbal-less gyroscopes consist of a ball that is suspended in a magnetic field and spun
electronically. Evacuating the air in the gyro cavity further reduces friction. Optical sensors measure the
ball’s orientation from symbols etched on the surface of the ball. The result is a near frictionless gyro with
precession rates measured in years.
ACOUSTIC GYROSCOPES
Another recent development is the inertial sensor based on vibrating quartz crystal technology. Like the
RLG, these are not true gyros. Acoustic gyros are manufactured from a single piece of microminiature
quartz rate sensor. Angular accelerations affect the patterns produced by a vibrating tuning fork and result
in torque on the fork proportional to the angular acceleration. These gyros appeared in inertial units in the
late 1990s.
STABLE PLATFORM
As we discussed earlier, three accelerometers are mounted on a platform and orientated (usually)
north/south, east/west, and up/down. This platform is driven by gyros (two or three) to always maintain its
alignment with these axes regardless of any movement of the aircraft. Analogue feeds can be taken
directly from the accelerometers and gyros that are in direct proportion to acceleration, and changes in
velocity and direction.
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Disadvantages: because of the mechanical assembly and many moving parts, stabilised platform
INS suffer from wear and tear, and friction causes the output to “drift” over time. Compensation for
drift requires complex bearing assemblies and special lubricants. Maintenance of stabilised platform
INS is complex, costly and time-consuming.
STRAP-DOWN PLATFORM
RLG and accelerometers are attached rigidly, or “strapped down”, to the frame of the aircraft i.e. as the
aircraft moves, so does the inertial system platform - exactly. Three gyroscopes sense the rate of roll,
pitch, and yaw and three accelerometers detect accelerations along each aircraft axis. It integrates them
to get the orientation, then mathematically calculates the acceleration of the north/south, east/west and
up/down axes, as a gimballed system would.
The advantages of reduced cost, size, weight and reliability make these systems the preferred choice
of inertial system for many aircrafts.
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Inertial systems generally are not the sole means of navigation on commercial airliners. Position errors
can be reduced by frequent updates of position from GPS and ground-based navigation aids.
Let's get through those typical position errors:
Drift. It is mostly associated with imperfections. In stable platform, these imperfections exist within
gyro bearings and mass imbalances. In strap-down RLG devices, the cause is derived almost
entirely from imperfections in the mirrors and their coatings.
Transport Wander. A gyro will attempt to maintain it’s original alignment with the Earth. When the
aircraft moves across the globe, the local horizontal reference changes and this will create an angle
with a gyro. This error is known as Transport Wander and also Apparent Drift. It is usually corrected
by signals derived from the INS Latitude and Longitude.
Earth Rotation. Inertial system detects Earth's rotation when moving. The final movement detected
will be a combination of both the aircraft’s movement and the Earth’s rotation. These errors are
small and can be compensated for.
Coriolis. As an aircraft travels from A to B around the globe it actually will follow a curved path (or a
series of shorter curved paths). An INS will detect this as turning and an error can be introduced.
Initial Position as the “shut-down” position will undoubtedly carry some error.
GNSS (GPS) Position bounding the INS position error.
Barometric Altitude helps to stabilise the vertical velocity and inertial altitude outputs.
True Air Speed (TAS) allows for the calculation of Wind Speed and Direction.
OUTPUTS
Typical inertial system outputs fed to other aircraft avionics and systems include, but are not limited to:
ALIGNMENT
Inertial systems usually require an initialisation process that establishes the relationship between the
aircraft (the reference axes) and the geographic reference (position and orientation). This process is
called alignment.
Alignment usually requires the aircraft to remain stationary for a period of time in order to initialise fully. It
also will normally require the input of certain data from another system or from a manual entry.
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Alignment can be achieved independent of any external data. This is known as self-alignment. Or the
alignment process can be speeded up with data supplied from a GPS or other systems, and even manual
entry.
PILOT INTERFACE
Aircraft manufacturers usually establish an approach to interact with the onboard inertial system. Here we
go through an example of a Boeing 737 NG Inertial Reference System (IRS) interface. It's located on the
aft overhead panel and includes IRS Display and IRS Mode Selector Unit.
IRS DISPLAY
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SEE ALSO
None
REFERENCE
OxTS article - Inertial navigation systems
Skybrary.aero - Inertial navigation system
Boeing 737NG FCOM
AUTHOR
VID 531824 - Creation
DATE OF SUBMISSION
Timestamp is not found!
COPYRIGHT
This documentation is copyrighted as part of the intellectual property of the International Virtual
Aviation Organisation.
DISCLAIMER
The content of this documentation is intended for aviation simulation only and must not be used for
real aviation operations.
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