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Principles and Applications of Aviation Navigation Systems

This course covers the principles and applications of aviation navigation systems, including GPS and INS. It provides an overview of navigation and guidance, navigation coordinates, radio navigation systems, GPS, and augmentation systems.

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Principles and Applications of Aviation Navigation Systems

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  1. 民航導航系統原理與應用 成大民航研究所 詹劭勳 老師 (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  2. Course Information – Books • Avionics Navigation Systems, M. Kayton, W. R. Fried, John, ISBN: 0471547956 • Many reference books (Keywords: GPS, INS): • Global Positioning System (GPS): Signals, Measurements and Performance, P. Misra and P. Enge, Ganga-Jamuna, 2001 • Strapdown Inertial Navigation Systems, D. H. Titterton and J. L. Weston • The Global Positioning System and Inertial Navigation, Farrell and Barth, McGraw-Hill, 1999 • Integrated Aircraft Navigation, J. L. Farrell, Academic Press, 1976 • Global Positioning Systems, Inertial Navigation and Integration, Grewal, Weill and Andrews, Wiley Interscience, 2001 (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  3. Outline • Part 1: Introduction • Part 2: Navigation Coordinate • Part 3: Radio Navigation Systems • Part 4: Global Positioning System • Part 5: Augmentation Systems (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  4. Part 1: Introduction An Overview of Navigation and Guidance (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  5. Navigation and Guidance • Navigation: The process of determining a vehicle’s / person’s / object’s position • Guidance: The process of directing a vehicle / person / object from one point to another along some desired path (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  6. Example • Getting from AA building to Tainan Train Station • How would you tell someone how to get there? • How would you tell a robot to get there? • Both problems assume there is some agreed upon coordinate system. • Latitude, Longitude, Altitude (Geodetic) • North, East, Down with respect to some origin • Ad Hoc system (“starting from AA building you go 1 block…”) • Most of our work in this class is going to be with the Navigation problem (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  7. Applications • Air Transportation • Marine, Space, and Ground Vehicles • Personal Navigation / Indoor Navigation • Surveying (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  8. Steering commands Sensor #1 Navigation and/or Guidance Processor Sensor #2 : : Sensor #N Navigation state vector A Navigation or Guidance System • Steering commands: instructions on what to do to get the vehicle going to where it should be going • Turn right / left • Go up / down • Speed up / slow down (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  9. Navigation State / State Vector • A set of parameters describing the position, velocity, altitude… of a vehicle • Navigation state vector: • Position = 3 coordinates of location, a 3x1 vector • Velocity = derivative of the position vector, a 3x1 vector • Attitude = a set of parameters which describe the vehicle’s orientation in space (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  10. Position and Velocity • More often than not, we are interested in position and velocity vectors expressed in separate coordinates (more on this later…) (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  11. Attitude • We will deal with two ways of describing the orientation of two coordinate frames • Euler angles: 3 angles describing relationship between 2-coordinate systems • Transformation matrix: maps vector in “A” coordinate frame to “B” (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  12. Attitude (continued) • The first entry of the attitude “vector”, ψ, is called yaw or heading. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  13. Navigation and Guidance Systems • In this class we will look at ways to determining some or all of the components of the navigation state vector. • Some navigation systems provide all of the entries of the navigation state vector (inertial navigation systems) and some only provide a subset of the state vector. • Guidance systems give instructions on how to achieve the desired position. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  14. Navigation and Guidance Systems (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  15. Categories of Navigation • Dead Reckoning • Positioning (position fixing) • Navigation systems are either one of the two or are hybrids. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  16. Dead Reckoning Systems • “Extrapolation” system: position is derived from a “series” of velocity, heading, acceleration or rotation measurements relative to an initial position. • To determine current position you must know history of past position • Heading and speed or velocity systems • Inertial navigation systems • System accuracy is a function of vehicle position trajectory (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  17. Positioning / Position Fixing Systems • Determine position from a set of measurements. • Knowledge of past position history is not required • Mapping system – Pilotage (pp.504-505) • Celestial systems – Star Trackers • Radio systems – VOR, DME, ILS, LORAN… • Satellite systems – GPS, GLONASS, Galileo… • System accuracy is independent of vehicle position trajectory (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  18. Brief History of Navigation • Land Navigation – “pilotage” traveling by reference to land marks. • Marine Navigation • Greeks (300~350 B.C.) – Record of going far north as Norway, “Periodic Scylax” (Navigation manual). • Vikings (1000 A.D.) – had compass • Ferdinand Magellan (1519) – recorded use of charts (maps), devices for getting star fixes, compass, hour glass and log (for speed). • The important point to note is that these early navigators were using dead reckoning and position fixing (hybrid system) (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  19. Determine Your Latitude Polaris h s γ RE Λ Equators Λ=Latitude (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  20. How do you determine longitude? • Dead reckoning • Compass for heading, log for speed • Not very accurate, heading errors, speed errors → position errors • Errors grow with time (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  21. The Longitude Problem • Longitude act of 1714 • £20,000 for 1/2o solution • £15,000 for 2/3o solution • £10,000 for 1o solution (about 111km resolution at equator!) • Board of longitude • Halley (“Halley Comet”) • Newton • Solution turned out to be a stable watch / clock (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  22. 20th Century and Aviation • Position fixing (guidance) systems: • Pilotage • Fires (1920) – US mail routes • Radio beacons • Late 1940’s most of the systems we use today started entering services • By 1960’s VOR/DME and ILS become standard in commercial aviation • Dead reckoning • Inertial navigation (1940) • German v-2 Rocket • Nuclear submarine (US NAVY) • Oceanic commercial flight (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  23. 20th Century and Aviation • Satellite based navigation systems • US NAVY Transit System (1964) • Global Positioning System • 1978 first satellite launched • 1995 declared operational • Other satellite navigation systems • GLONASS – Former Soviet Union • Galileo – being developed by the EU (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  24. Performance Metrics and Trade-Off • Cost • Autonomy • Coverage • Capacity • Accuracy • Availability • Continuity • Integrity • Area of active research: 5,6,7,8 • Accuracy: we will visit it in detail later on. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  25. Part 2: Navigation Coordinate Frames, Transformations and Geometry of Earth. • Navigation coordinate frames • Geometry of earth (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  26. Coordinate Frames • The position vector (the main output of any navigation system and our primary concern in this class) can be expressed in various coordinate frames. • Notation (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  27. Why Multiple Coordinate Frames? • Depending on the application at hand some coordinates can be easier to use. • In some applications, multiple frames are used simultaneously because different parts of the problem are easier to manage. • For example, • GPS: normally position and velocity in “ECEF” • INS: normally position in geodetic and velocity in “NED” (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  28. Cartesian ECEF ECI NED (locally tangent Frames) ENU (locally tangent Frames) Spherical/cylindrical Geodetic Azimuth-Elevation-Range Bearing-Range-Attitude Coordinate Frames Except for ECI, all are non-inertial frames, an inertial frames is a non-accelerating (translation and rotation) coordinate frames. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  29. ECEF and ECI • Earth Centered and Earth Fixed (ECEF) • Cartesian Frame with origin at the center of earth. • Fixed to and rotates with earth. • A non-inertial frame. • Earth Centered Inertial (ECI) • Cartesian frame with origin at earth’s center. • Z axis along earth’s rotation vector. • X-y plane in equatorial plane. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  30. Geodetic • Geodetic (Latitude, Longitude, Altitude) – Spherical • Latitude (Λ) = north – south of equator, range ± 90o • Longitude (λ) = east – west of prime meridian, range ± 180o • Altitude (h) = height above reference datum • “+” north latitude, east longitude, down (below) datum altitude (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  31. NED and ENU • North-East-Down (NED) • Cartesian • No fixed location for the origin • Locally tangent to earth at origin • East-North-Up (ENU) • Cartesian • Similar to NED except for the direction of 1-2-3 axes. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  32. Azimuth-Elevation-Range • Azimuth-Elevation-Range • Spherical • No fixed origin • Azimuth is angle between a line connecting the origin and the point of interest (in the tangent plane) and a line from origin to north pole • Elevation is the angle between the local tangent plane and a line connecting the origin to a point of interest • Range is the slant or line-of-sight distance (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  33. Azimuth-Elevation-Range • Two types of azimuth or heading angles • True: measured with respect to the geographic (true) north pole (ψT) • Magnetic: measured with respect to the magnetic north pole (ψM) (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  34. Earth Magnetic Field • 1st order approximation is that of a simple dipole • Poles move with time. • In 1996 magnetic north pole was located at (79oN,105oW) • In 2003 it is located at (82oN,112oW) • Also, can “wander” by as much as 80km per day (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  35. Earth Magnetic Field • Magnetic poles are used in navigation because ψM is easier to measure than ψT • Bx and By are measured by devices called magnetometers (Ch.9) • Anomalies such as local iron deposits lead to erroneous ψM reading • Iron range deposits of N.E. Minnesota can lead to errors as large as 50o (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  36. Shape / Geometry of Earth • Topographical / physical surface • Geoid • Reference ellipsoid (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  37. Shape / Geometry of Earth (continued) • Topographical surface – shape assumed by earth’s crust. Complicated and difficult to model mathematically. • Geoid – an equipotential surface of earth’s gravity field which best fits (least squares sense) global mean sea level (MSL) • Reference ellipsoid – mathematical fit to the geoid that is an ellipsoid of revolution and minimizes the mean-square deviation of local gravity (i.e., local norm to geoid) and ellipsoid norm, WGS-84 (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  38. Latitude (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  39. WGS–84 • Four defining parameters • Other parameters are derived from the four • Equatorial radius = 6378.137km • Flattening = 1/298.257223563 • Rotation rate of earth in inertial space = 15.041067 degree/hour • Earth’s gravitational constant (GM) = 3.986004x108m3/s2 (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  40. Part3:Radio Navigation Systems I: Fundamentals • I: Fundamentals • II: Survey of Current Systems (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  41. Radio Navigation Systems • These are systems that use Radio Frequency (RF) signals to generate information required for navigation. • C = speed of electromagnetic waves in free space (“ speed of light ”) • “ Radio waves ” correspond to electromagnetic waves with frequency between 10 KHz and 300 GHz (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  42. Frequency (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  43. GPS signals are L band Signals • MLS uses C band signals Expand Frequency (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  44. Radio Signal Propagation (1/3) • Ground Waves • Waves below the HF range (i.e., < 3 MHz) • Unpredictable path characteristics • Required large antenna • Atmospheric noise (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  45. Radio Signal Propagation (2/3) • Line of Sight Waves: • Signals > 30 MHz • 100 MHz – 3 GHz – predictable • Above 3 GHz – absorption • Above 10 GHz – discrete absorption (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  46. Radio Signal Propagation (3/3) • Sky Waves • HF and below (i.e., < 30 MHz) • Multipath • Fading • Skip distance: depends of frequency and ionosphere conditions (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  47. Modulation Techniques • Modulation – how you place information of the RF signal • Amplitude modulation (AM) – change the amplitude of sinusoid to relay information • Frequency modulation (FM) – change in frequency of transmitted signal to relay information • Phase modulation (PM) – change phase of transmitted signal to relay information • The signal can be transmitted as a pulse or a continuous wave. Either one can be modulated by the above methods. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  48. How do you distinguish one beacon from another? • Frequency division multiple access (FDMA) – each transmitter/beacon uses a different frequency • Time division multiple access (TDMA) – each transmitter/beacon transmits at a specified time • Code division multiple access (CDMA) –each transmitter/beacon uses an identifier code to distinguish itself from the other transmitters or beacons (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  49. Important Conclusions • Low frequency systems – ground wave transmission – long range systems, Loran. • High frequency systems – line of sight systems (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

  50. (c)Shau-Shiun Jan, IAA, NCKU

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