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Absolute Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (ARAIM)

Absolute Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (ARAIM). Todd Walter Stanford University http://waas.stanford.edu. Introduction. GPS is an important component of today’s aviation navigation infrastructure Its role will continue to increase over the coming years

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Absolute Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (ARAIM)

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  1. Absolute Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (ARAIM) Todd Walter Stanford University http://waas.stanford.edu

  2. Introduction • GPS is an important component of today’s aviation navigation infrastructure • Its role will continue to increase over the coming years • Future GNSS constellations will also become important contributors • However, their incorporation must be done with great care as the integrity requirements for aircraft guidance are very stringent • Less than 10-7 probability of misleading information • International standards define different types of GNSS augmentations to achieve this level of integrity

  3. Integrity Monitoring • Satellite-based and ground-based augmentation systems provide independent monitoring of the GPS signals through calibrated ground monitors • Requires ground monitoring network communication channel to aircraft • Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM) compares redundant satellite range measurements against each other to identify and eliminate significant faults • Requires a greater number of ranging measurements than SBAS or GBAS

  4. Compass Galileo VPL VPL VPL VPL GLONASS ARAIM Protection Level GPS

  5. RAIM vs. ARAIM • LNAV requirements are much less stringent than LPV • Alert limit measure in nautical miles • Only real threat is a large clock error • For LPV MI is hazardous (vs. major) • Alert limit in tens of meters • Many sources of potentially significant errors • Two or more smaller errors may combine to cause a large enough error • ARAIM needed to more carefully account for all threats

  6. Interoperability of Integrity • Interoperability should be a goal not only for GNSS signals, but also for integrity provision • Augmentation systems already internationally coordinated • Open service signals should target performance comparable to or better than GPS L1 signals today • Different service providers may make different design choices and different assurances • However, it is important to establish a common understanding of how RAIM depends on GNSS performance and how signals from different services could be combined to improve RAIM • Cooperation and transparency are essential

  7. Benefits of Multi-Constellation RAIM • Combining signals from multiple constellations can provide significantly greater availability and higher performance levels than can be achieved individually • Support for vertically guided approaches • Potential to provide a safety of life service without requiring the GNSS service provider to certify each system to 10-7 integrity levels • Creates a truly international solution • All service providers contribute • Not dependent on any single entity • Coverage is global and seamless

  8. Service Commitment • Each service provider should provide documentation of their service commitment • Encourage usage by other states • Allows planning of combined service level • Supports development of interface specifications and user algorithms • Commitment should include details on: • Accuracy, continuity, availability, fault modes, broadcast parameters, and other operating characteristics • Assurances should be provided for minimum commitments

  9. Specification of Faults • Perform a fault modes and effects analysis • Understand and make transparent potential faults and their effects • Assure low fault rates • Of order 10-5/SV/Hour • Assure low probability of simultaneous or common mode faults • Ideally below 10-8/Constellation/Hour • Assure a short time to alert • Not longer than 6 hours • Maintain independence from other service providers

  10. Monitoring and Assurance • Methods for monitoring conformity of signal properties relative to provided assurances should be agreed upon mutually by service providers and approval authorities • Require clear unambiguous evaluations of assurances • May be made by any potential approval authority • Desirable to have a means to resolve potential observations of non-conformity • Long-term monitoring by each sovereign state is an important component of establishing reliability • Each constellation still cross-checked by others in user avionics

  11. Interface Specification • Each system may broadcast different parameters or provide different levels of assurance • However, a common understanding of how each parameter is used must be reached • The parameters must be combined into a single upper bound for the joint position estimate • The upper bound must be safe regardless of which combinations of satellites are used • Also able to account for potentially different properties • Requires a more advanced form of RAIM than is used currently for LNAV • Good candidates already exist

  12. Summary • RAIM allows for worldwide aviation navigation without requiring additional ground infrastructure • Additional GNSS constellations can significantly improve performance and availability • At a minimum, new GNSS constellations should assure that their open service signals support existing LNAV RAIM • Should work together to specify a means to achieve multi-constellation RAIM for vertical guidance • International cooperation and coordination will be essential to achieving this goal

  13. Specification of Accuracy • The dominant error sources should be understood and characterized • Satellite clock and ephemeris within constellation tied to clear, stable, global, reference frames • Code and carrier signals coherently derived from a common source • Well designed signals to reduce multipath, ionosphere, and distortion effects • International coordination already well-established • Document how the expected performance level is indicated to the user • Should broadcast expected accuracy for a fault-free ranging source

  14. Specification of Availability & Continuity • Description of constellation geometry • Number of satellites, planes, spacing, etc. • Assure minimum levels of operating satellites • e.g. .99999 probability of at least 20 primary slots occupied by satellites broadcasting valid signals • Assure minimum levels of continuity • e.g. less than .0002 probability of unscheduled interruption or fault of previously healthy signal • Lesser minimums support multi-const. RAIM even if they cannot support stand-alone

  15. Fault Tree and Probability of Hazardously Misleading Information (PHMI) Courtesy: Juan Blanch Any mode causes HMI PHMIk PHMI0 PHMI1 No failures/ rare normal create HMI failure of sat 1 causes HMI … failure of sat k causes HMI … Mode prior probability = ~1 Mode prior prob-ability = ~1e-4 Mode prior prob-ability = ~1e-4 • For each branch, a monitor mitigates the probability of HMI given the failure • In ARAIM, the monitors are formed by comparing subset solutions

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