CHECK LIST for DESIGNERS

Questions submitted by members of various forums, understandably, frequently involve one or more of the following topics:
 * some or all facets of inertial navigation
 * means of updating and reinitializing the drifting inertial solution
 * satellite navigation (GPS/GNSS) for providilng the updates
 * other means of updating (radar, laser, optics, VOR, DME, hyperbolic, … )
 * best ways to use what’s available for various applications.
 
The pool of literature that might be offered can be vast, partly due to a vast array of operations – each with application-dependent requirements.  Finding just the relevant information from a mountain of available references can be a daunting task, especially for young designers.  I’ll try to make their search easier, by offering a list they can ask themselves early in the design process:
 * do you need a lat/lon/altitude Earth reference or just a designated point?
 * is the path determined from provisions onboard (nav) or remote (track)?
 * what’s your required accuracy for “absolute” (geolocation) position?
 * what’s your required accuracy for relative position (e.g., from a runway)?
 * do you need precise incremental position history (SAR motion compensation)?
 * do you need precise angular orientation (e.g., laser pointing)?
 * do you need precise angular rates (for image or antenna stabilization)?
 * for direction do you use a North reference or just along-track/cross-track?
 * will you have dependable access to updating information (GPS, radar, …)?
 * if not, how irregular will dynamics be over active parts of your mission?
 * if so, how irregular will the dynamics be during inter-update periods?
 * also if so, what data rate? Longest expected “blind period” between updates?
 * also if so, will measurements need averaging to meet your required accuracy?
 * also if so, how accurate are your measurements AND their time stamps?
 * also if so, can you use postprocessing or do you need everything real-time?
 * are you willing to accept partial updates (some but not all directions)?
 * do you need just position or derivatives too (velocity, acceleration)?
 * if so, how long can your dynamics be trusted to conform to model fidelity?
 * are you doing INS update (e.g., replacing acceleration with tilt states)?
 * if so, will you need to deduce drift rates – and how long will those hold?
 * do your sensors measure distances, angles, doppler, differences of those?
 * for how long does your sensor information content provide observability?
 * how’s your sensor integrity (bad readings at least detectable if present)?
 * for safety-critical operations — what are your backup provisions?
 * are you accommodating multiple modes with time-shared sensing resources?
 * do you need to perform image registration with different imaging sensors?
etc.etc. — the list goes on.  I won’t even try to claim thoroughness; you get the idea.  Designers with new tasks dumped in their lap can understandably feel overwhelmed.  Searching for references can become a trip through a maze of half-relevant sources.
 
A first step, then, is to separate the relevant (what you need) from the irrelevant (what you don’t need), instantly dismiss any thought of the latter, and do the opposite with the former (nail it).
 
Brief examples — the first two items from the above list –
 * If you just need to know your location relative to a designated point, irrespective of its latitude and lingitude — this might help:
 * If you’re tracking instead of navigating — check these out –
and one from the last item from that list –
Again, you get the idea — volumes have been written on all facets.  Many won’t apply to your immediate task; disregard those.
 
The good news is — paths to logical solutions are known and documented.  To avoid abandoning you to an enormous maze of references I’ll point out some fundamental and advanced (state-of-the-art) tracts that address all issues just cited and more.  Several blogs and short “1-pagers” will help individual designers to choose, based on their specific tasks, passages from available references.
 
Before GPS we struggled hard for accurate measurements in enough places.  That actually produced a benefit — we had to be resourceful.  My biggest challenge was to understand subjects (Kalman filtering, strapdown inertial navigation) then considered exotic.  Again a benefit; pulling information from 1950s books and papers forced me to understand, focus, and reduce concepts to whatever level became necessary.  The experience prompted me to write the first of my two books on navigation,   http://jameslfarrell.com/published-books-gnss-aided-navigation-and-tracking/integrated-aircraft-navigation.
 
That first book has been used in myriad courses, including one currently taught by Prof. Hablani who wrote the most recent testimonial shown on that URL and on http://tinyurl.com/vigilinc.
 
Some topics that earlier book explained in detail recently came up in another discussion — http://www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=44646633&gid=160643&commentID=68798460&trk=view_disc
For example, slow (“W” radian/sec) oscillations with “W” corresponding to the Schuler period (between 83 and 84 minutes). In that case position error from accelerometer bias, propagating as (1 – cos Wt), rises much sooner than gyro drift, propagating as (t – sin Wt/W). Page 80 of that book sketches an example of behavior over a cycle.  Development offered beyond there expands as far as many analysts wish to go (other natural frequencies of error propagation, rectification of vibration-sensitive errors, etc.).
 
Not long after that first book appeared, GPS became operational — and I was a newcomer to that.  By the time I understood it there were many experts.  Once again I had to catch up, and the process was gradual.  With an exceptionally strong client interested in my inertial background, a synergism was formed. That led to a flight test producing state-of-the-art accuracy in dynamics; see the table at http://jameslfarrell.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/GPSINS.pdf — describing several innovations also resulting from the work just described.
 
That second book, after a review chapter, begins where the first (pre-GPS) one left off.  It also (1)is used in tutorials and (2)has received testimonials from other instructors, as the URL shows.  Sources cited here, plus an online 1.5-hr tutorial, free to Inst-of-Navigation members (www.ion.org/tutorials/), plus a
“try-before-you-buy” 100-page excerpt available from this site, should be helpful to many.

Dept. of Homeland Security on GPS jamming & spoofing

 

At ION GNSS 2011 in Portland OR, Javad Ashjaee, James L. Farrell and others participated in a panel discussing the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security’s concerns on the effects of GPS jamming and spoofing on our national critical infrastructure.

 

 As Dr. Todd Humphreys noted, U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security recently completed a risk assessment of the effects of GPS jamming and spoofing on national critical infrastructure. Some of us participated as subject matter experts in this assessment.

The DHS report, which is the most thorough one to date on this topic, has left many people saying “Yes, it’s a problem. Now what?”

This panel addressed the question “Now what?”

 

Topic: How do we secure civil GNSS?

 

Schedule

    • 8:30: Welcome and introduction: Moderator introduces topic, format, and ground rules
    • 8:40: Moderator introduces panelists
    • 8:45: Moderator frames the central question: “How do we secure civil GNSS?”
    • 8:50: Logan Scott
    • 9:00: Panel/audience response to Logan’s remarks
    • 9:10: Javad Ashjaee
    • 9:20: Panel/audience response to Javad’s remarks
    • 9:30: Mark Psiaki
    • 9:40: Panel/audience response to Mark’s remarks
    • 9:50: Questions from audience, discussion among panelists

10:05 — 10:35: Morning break

  • 10:35: Moderator welcomes audience and panel back, summarizes morning discussion
  • 10:40: Oscar Pozzobon
  • 10:50: Panel/audience response to Oscar’s remarks
  • 11:00:James Farrell
  • 11:10: Panel/audience response to James’s remarks
  • 11:20: Felix Kneißl
  • 11:30: Panel/audience response to Felix’s remarks
  • 11:40: Questions from audience; discussion among panelists
  • 12:10: Moderator and panelists offer concluding remarks
  • 12:15: Panel concludes

ON GNSS 2011
September 19-23, 2011 (Tutorials: September 19-20)
Oregon Convention Center, Portland, Oregon

Click here for more information

http://www.ion.org/meetings/session.cfm?meetingID=34&t=P&s=5

Life before GPS

Before GPS took over so many operations by storm (e.g., navigation,tracking, timing, surveying, etc.), designers had access to other — far less capable — provisions.  That condition forced our hands; to derive maximum benefit from what was available, we had to extract full information content from those provisions.  Now that GPS is subjected to challenges (aging, jamming, etc.), some of those older methods are receiving increased scrutiny.  Recently I’ve received renewed interest in areas I analyzed decades ago.  Old publications from two of those areas are discussed here: 1) attitude determination and 2) nav integration.

“Attitude Determination by Kalman Filtering” is the title of three documents I had published.  In reverse sequence they are:
1) Automatica (IFAC Journal), v6 1970, pp. 419-430,
2) my Ph.D. dissertation (Univ. of Maryland, 1967),
3) NASA CR-598, Sept., 1966.
As indicated by the last reference, the work was the result of a contractual study sponsored by NASA (specifically Goddard Space Flight Center – GSFC – in Greenbelt Maryland).  I was working for Wetinghouse Defense and Space Center at the time.  The proposal I had written to win this contract cited my work prior to then, in both modern estimation (“Simulation of a Minimum Variance OrbitalNavigation System,” AIAA JSR v 3 Jan 1966 pp. 91-98) and attitude computation (“Performance of Strapdown Inertial Attitude Reference Systems,” AIAA JSR v 3 Sept 1966, pp. 1340-1347).  Let me hasten to explain the dates of those Journal publications: each followed its inclusion at an AIAA-sponsored conference, about a year earlier.

By the mid-1960s there was an appreciable amount of validation for Kalmen filtering applied to determination of orbits (that track record was convincing) but not yet for attitude.  A GSFC-sponsored investigation was then planned — the very first one for attitude using modern estimation methods.  GSFC management understandably wanted that contractual investigation to be performed by someone with demonstrable experience in both Kalman filtering and rotational dynamics.  In those days that combination was rare; the Westinghouse proposal was chosen as the winner.  At the time of that study, provisions realistically available for attitude updating consisted of mediocre-accuracy items such as magnetometers and horizon scanners– not bad but not spectacular either.
All that was of course before GPS weighed in, with its opportunity to reveal attitude from phase differences between antennas spaced at known distances apart.  That vastly superior capability effectively reduced earlier crude measurements to relative obscurity.  A directly parallel situation occurred in connection with navigation; the book that first tied together several facets of advancement in that field (integration, strapdown inertial, modern estimation with  acceptance of all data sources, multimode operation, extension to tracking, clear exposition of all commonly used representations of attitude, etc.) was”pre-GPS” (1976), and consequently regarded as less relevant. Timing can be decisive — that’s no one’s fault.

The item just noted — attitude representation — is worth further discussion here.  Unlike many other sources, the 1976 book offered an opportunity to use quaternion properties without any need to learn a specialized quaternion algebra.  A literature search, however, will point primarily to various sources (of necessity, later than 1976).that benefit from the superior performance offered through GPS usage. Again, in view of GPS as a game-changer, that is not necessarily improper.  Most publications on attitude determination don’t cite the first-ever investigation, sponsored by GSFC, for that innocent reason.

The word beginning that last sentence (“Most”) has an exception.  One author, widely quoted as an authority (especially on quaternions), did cite the original work — dismissing it as “ad-hoc” — while using an exact copy of the sensitivity matrix elements pubished in my original investigation (the three references cited at the start of this blog).
While I obviously didn’t invent either quaternions or the Kalman filter, there was another thing I didn’t do: fail to credit, in my publications, pre-existing sources that contributed to my findings. Publication of the material cited here, I’ve been told, paved the way for understanding and insight to many who followed. No one owes me anything for that; an analyst’s work, truthfully and realistically presented, is what the analyst has to offer.

It is worth pointing out that both the attitude determination study and the 1976 book cover another facet of rotational analysis absent from many other related publications: dynamics — in the sense of physics.  Whereas modern estimation lumps time-variations of the state together into one all-encompassing “dynamic” model, classical physics makes a separation: Kinematics defines the relation between position, rates, and accelerations.  Dynamics determines translational accelerations resulting from forces or rotational accelerations resulting from torques.

Despite absence of GPS from my early (1960s/70s) investigations, one feature that can still make them useful for today’s analysts is the detailed characterization of torques acting — in very different ways — on spinning and gravity-gradient satellites, plus their effects on rotational motion. Many of the later studies focused on the rotational kinematics, irrespective of those torques and their consequences. Similarly, the “minimal-math”approach to explaining integrated navigation has enabled many to grasp the concepts.  Printed testimony to that effect, from courses I taught decades ago, is augmented by more recent source noted near the end of another page shown on this site.

RUNWAY INCURSIONS

The number of runway incursions for FY 2011, as shown on an FAA URL is on pace for a yearly total of about a thousand.

It would be worth investigating Mode-S transmission once per second, at a very low-level (undetectable at distances beyond an airport). Message content could take the form discussed in an accompanying blog.

GPS Needs Backup, Improvement, Robustness … — Still

This communication is prompted by two important and informative briefs appearing in the Spring of 2011,

  • Sally Basker’s Expert Advice column in the May 2011 issue of GPS World
  • “DEFENSE MATTERS” by Doug Taggart et.al. on page 22 of the Spring 2011 ION Newsletter.
  • I feel compelled to voice support of these authors — not just because points they raise are consistent with many of my own writings (a bit more on that later) — but because, unlike a “one-man-band” (myself), they could be in a position to catalyze remedial action.

    The briefs just cited point, correctly, to shortcomings in stewardship of a vital resource.  Those shortcomings are so severe that, after a lifetime of acknowledging how management is far beyond my range of capability, I’m now jumping in over my head.  Maybe my only way to help coax decision-makers gently toward action is to assert that paralysis-of-the-will is easily recognized, even to someone with no administrative capability at all.

    In regard to concurrence from my own writings — rather than a long list of sources, I’ll name just one: a short GPS World TechTalk blog, with links to other papers, blogs, etc. that can be accessed at the readers’ option.  Those who exercise that option will find a wealth of evidence for, and advocacy of, available means to enhance satellite navigation performance under adverse conditions.  By that I’m not implying that I had already covered all the points raised this Spring — i.e., the briefs cited at the beginning of this post include items not covered in my earlier writings.

    The point is that Sally Basker and the Overlook authors (Doug Taggart et.al.) are right.  So was GPS World’s “Masked Engineer” of 2010.  So are many more, too numerous to list here, who speak out on these issues — repeatedly.  We repeat our concerns, not to be burdensome and annoying like some broken record; we persist because the problems being identified persist.  Action is essential — or, as long as I’m jumping in over my head — continued inaction is inexcusable.

    Aircraft Collision Avoidance: Move Forward ?

    A 1996 crash that killed U.S. Commerce Secretary Ron Brown drew attention to a problem that has caused thousands of airline fatalities.  Controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) results from an autopilot driven by erroneous information regarding aircraft‘s flight path relative to its surroundings.  This writer narrowly escaped death in early January 1981 when an errant foreign airliner very nearly collided with the World Trade Center (that time it would have been accidental); an alert air traffic controller issued a turn directive just in time.  A highly informative IEEE-AES Systems Journal article by Swihart et.al. –
    …. “Automatic Ground Collision Avoidance System Design, Integration, and Test” (May 2011, pp.-4-11)
    addresses CFIT while envisioning, near the end, future extension to unmanned aircraft.  The authors correctly describe the effort as the beginning of a long-awaited development with a huge payoff in lives to be saved and, secondarily, in vehicles not destroyed.  As proof of my full concurrence — both with the intent and with the “long-awaited” characterization — I cite the following:

    * a “GPS for Collision Avoidance” seminar I prepared in 2000 (hardly anyone attended — no funding, no interest — but safety shouldn’t take a back seat to economics).
    * two coauthored papers (ICNS 2009 and ION-GNSS-2011) resulting from recent low-level support to Ohio Univ. by NASA.

     

    It remains true to this day: much more needs to be done.  Without significant increase in development, life will be increasingly hazardous.  Both heavier traffic and unmanned aircraft will contribute to the increased danger.

    BOOK on TRACKING

    Tracking acceleration dynamics by GNSS, radar, imaging

    My 2007 book on GPS and GNSS (GNSS Aided Navigation & Tracking), as its title implies, involves both navigation and tracking. This discussion describes the latter, covered in the longest chapter of the book (Chapter 9).  In addition to the flight-validated algorithms for navigation (processing of inertial sensor data, integration with GPS/GNSS, integrity, etc.), this text offers extensive coverage of tracking. Formulations are given for a variety of modes, in 2-D (e.g., for runway incursion prevention or ships) and 3-D (in-air), using GPS/GNSS and/or other sensors (e.g., radar, optical).  Position and velocity vectors are formed, in some operations joined by some or all components of acceleration.

    This author was fortunate to be “at-the-right-places at-the-right-times” when a need arose to address each of the topics covered.  As a result, the words of one reviewer — that the book is

    …………….. “teeming with insights that are hard to find or unavailable elsewhere.”

    applies to tracking as well as to navigation.  The book identifies subtleties that arise in specific applications (aircraft, ships, land vehicles, satellites, long-range or short-range projectiles, reentry vehicles, missiles, … ). In combination with a variety of possible conditions affecting sensor suite and location (air-to-air; air-to-ground; air-to-sea surface; surface-to-air, etc. – with measurements associated with distance or direction or both; shared or not shared among participants who may communicate from different positions), it is not surprising that striking contrasts can arise, influencing the characterization and approaches used.  The array of formulations offered, while fully accounting for marked differences among operations, nevertheless exploits an underlying commonality to the maximum possible extent.

    Tracking dynamics of aircraft, missiles, ships, satellites, projectiles, …

    Formulations described in Chapter 9 were used for tracking of both aircraft and missiles, concurrently, through usage of an agile beam radar.  For another example, air-to-surface operations subdivide into air-to-ground and vessel tracking from the air.  That latter case constrains tracked objects’ altitudes to mean sea level – a substantial benefit since it obviates the need for elevation measurements, which are subject to large errors from refraction (bearing and range measurements, much less severely degraded, suffice). Air-to-ground tracking, by contrast, further subdivides into stationary and moving targets; the former potentially involves imaging possibilities (by real or synthetic aperture) while the latter — if not being imaged by inverse SAR — separates its signature from clutter via doppler.

    Reentry vehicles, quite different from other track operations, present a unique set of “do’s” and “don’ts” owing to high-precision range measurements combined with much larger cross-range errors (because of proportionality to extreme distances involved).  Pitfalls from uncertain axial direction of “pancake” shaped one-sigma error ellipsoids must be avoided.  A counterexample, having angle observations only (without distance measurements), is also addressed.  Orbit determination is unique in still another way, often permitting “patched-conic” modeling for its dynamics.  A program based on Lambert’s theorem provides initial trajectories from two position vectors with the time interval separating them.

    Those operations and more are addressed with most observations from radar or other (e.g., infrared imaging) sensors rather than satellite measurements.  That of course applies to tracked objects carrying no squitters. Friendlies tracking one another, however, open the door for using GNSS data.  Those subjects plus numerous supporting functions are discussed at some length in Chapter 9.  Despite very different dynamics applicable to various operations, the underlying commonality (Chapter 2) connects the error propagation traits in their estimation algorithms and also — though widely unrecognized — short-term INS error propagation under cruise conditions (Chapters 2 and 5).  Support operations such as synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and transfer alignment are described in the chapter Addendum.

    The book on GPS and GNSS

    GPS and GNSS

    Check out a preview of “GNSS Aided Navigation & Tracking” (click here)

    GNSS Aided Navigation & Tracking

    – Inertially Augmented or Autonomous
    By James L. Farrell
    American Literary Press. 2007. Hardcover. 280 pages
    ISBN-13: 978-1-56167-979-9

    This text offers concise guidance on integrating inertial sensors with GPS and also its international version (global navigation satellite system; GNSS) receivers plus other aiding sources. Primary focus is on low-cost inertial measurement units (IMUs) with  frequent updates, but  other functions (e.g., tracking in numerous modes) and sensors (e.g., radar) are also addressed.

    Price is: $100.00 Plus Shipping
    (Sales Tax for Maryland residents only)
    Click here to view purchase information

    Dr. Farrell has many decades of experience in this subject area; in the words of one reviewer, the book is “teeming with insights that are hard to find or unavailable elsewhere.”

    An engineer and former university instructor, Farrell has made a number of contributions to multiple facets of  navigation.  He is also the author of Integrated Aircraft Navigation (1976; five hard cover printings; now in paperback) plus over eighty journal or conference manuscripts and various columns.

    Frequent aiding-source updates, in applications that require precise velocity rather than extreme precision in position, enables integration to be simplified. All aspects of integration are covered, all the way from  raw measurement pre-processing to final 3-D position/velocity/attitude, with far more thorough backup and integrity provisions.  Extensive experimental results  illustrate the attainable accuracies (cm/s RMS  velocities in three-dimensions) during flight under extreme vibration.

    The book on GPS and GNSS provides several flight-validated formulations and algorithms not currently in use because of their originality. Considerable opportunity is therefore offered in multiple areas including
    * full use of highly intermittent ambiguous carrier phase
    * rigorous integrity for separate SVs
    * unprecedented robustness and situation awareness
    * high performance from low cost IMUs
    * “cookbook” steps
    * new interoperability features
    * new insights for easier implementation.

    Discussion of these traits can be seen in the excerpt (over 100 pages) from the  link at the top of this page.

    GYRO MOUNTING MISALIGNMENT: DEAL BREAKER

    Schuler cycles distorted — Here’s why

    1999 publication I coauthored took dead aim at a characteristic that received far too little attention — and still continues to be widely overlooked: mechanical mounting misalignment of inertial instruments.  To make the point as clearly as possible I focused exclusively on gyro misalignment — e.g., the sensitive axes of roll, pitch, and yaw gyros aren’t quite perpendicular to one another.  It was easily shown that the effect in free-inertial coast (i.e., with no updates from GPS or other navaids) was serious, even if no other errors existed.

    It’s important here to discuss why the message took so long to penetrate.  The main reason is historic; inertial navigation originated in the form of a gimbaled platform holding the gyros and accelerometers in a stable orientation.  When the vehicle carrying that assembly would rotate, the gimbal servos would automatically receive a command from the gyros, keeping the platform oriented along its reference directions (e.g., North/East/vertical for moderate latitudes).  Since angular rates experienced by the inertial instruments were low, gyro misalignment and scale factor errors were much more tolerable than they are with today’s strapdown systems.  I’ve been calling that the ”Achilles’ heel” of strapdown for decades now.  The roots go all the way back to 1966 (publication #6) when simulation clearly showed how serious it is.  Not long thereafter another necessary departure from convention became quite clear: replacement of the omnipresent nmi/hr performance criteria for numerous operations.  That characteristic is an average over a period between 83 and 84 minutes.  It is practically irrelevant for a large and growing number of applications that depend on short-term accuracy. {e.g., synthetic aperture radar (SAR), inertial aiding of track loops, antenna stabilization, etc.}, Early assertions of that reality (publication #26 and mention of it in still earlier reports and publications involving SAR) were essentially lost in ”that giant shouting match out there” until some realization crept in after publication #38.

    Misalignment: mechanical mounting imprecision

    Whenever this topic is discussed, certain points must be put to rest.  The first concerns terminology; much of the petinent literature uses the word misalignments to describe small-angle directional uncertainty components (e.g., error in perception of downward and North, which drive errors in velocity).  To avoid misinterpretation I refer to nav-axis direction uncertainty as misorientation.  In the presence of rotations, mounting misalignment contributes to misorientation.  Those effects, taking place promptly upon rotation of the strapdown inertial instrument assembly, stand in marked contrast to leisurely (nominal 84-minute) classical Schuler dynamics.

    The second point, lab calibration, is instantly resolved by redefining each error as a residual amount remaining due to calibration imperfections plus post-cal aging and thermal effects — that amount is still (1) excessive in many cases, and (2) in any event, not covered by firm spec commitments.

    A third point involves error propagation and a different kind of calibration (in-flight).  With the old (gimbal) mechanization, in-flight calibration could counteract much overall gyro drift effect.  Glib assessments in the 1990s promoted widespread belief that the same would likewise be true for  strapdown.  Changing that perspective motivated the investigation and publication mentioned at the top of this blog.

    In that publication it was shown that, although the small-angle approximation is conservative for large changes in direction, it is not extremely so.  The last equation of its Appendix A shows a factor of (pi/2) for a 180-deg turn.  A more thorough discussion of that issue, and how it demands attentiveness to short-lived angular rates, appears on pages 98-99 of GNSS Aided Navigation and Tracking.  Appendix II on pages 239-258 of that same book also provides a program, with further supporting analysis, that supersedes the publication mentioned at the top of this blog.  That program can be downloaded from here.

    The final point concerns the statistical distribution of errors.  Especially with safety involved (e.g., trusting free-inertial coast error propagation), it is clearly not enough to specify RMS errors.  For example, 2 arc-sec is better than 20 but what are the statistics?  Furthermore there is nothing to preclude unexpected extension of duration for free-inertial coast after a missed approach followed by a large change in direction.  A recent coauthored investigation (Farrell and vanGraas, ION-GNSS-2010 Proceedings) applies Extreme Value Theory (EVT) to outliers, showing unacceptably high incidences of large multiples (e.g., ten-sigma and beyond).  To substantiate that, there’s room here for an abbreviated explanation –  even in linear systems, gaussian inputs produce gaussian outputs only under very restrictive conditions.

    A more complete assessment of misalignment accounts for further imperfections in mounting: the sensitive axis of each accelerometer deviates from that of its corresponding gyro.  As explained on page 72 of Integrated Aircraft Navigation, an IMU with a gyro-accelerometer combo for each of three nominally orthogonal directions has nine total misalignment components for instruments relative to each other.

    DEAD RECKONING by GPS CARRIER PHASE

    GPS Carrier Phase for Dynamics ?

    The practice of dead reckoning (a figurative phrase of uncertain origin) is five centuries old.   In its original form, incremental excursions were plotted on a mariner’s chart using dividers for distances, with directions obtained via compass (with corrections for magnetic variation and deviation). Those steps, based on perceived velocity over known time intervals, were accumulated until a correction became available (e.g., from a landmark or a star sighting).

    Modern technology has produced more accurate means of dead reckoning, such as Doppler radar or inertial navigation systems.   Addressed here is an alternative means of dead reckoning, by exploiting sequential changes in highly accurate carrier phase. The method, successfully validated in flight with GPS, easily lends itself to operation with satellites from other GNSS constellations (GALILEO, GLONASS, etc.).  That interoperability is now one of the features attracting increased attention; sequential changes in carrier phase are far easier to mix than the phases themselves, and measurements formed that way are insensitive to ephemeris errors (even with satellite mislocation,  changes in satellite position are precise).

    Even with usage of only one constellation (i.e., GPS for the flight test results reported here), changes in carrier phase over 1-second intervals provided important benefits. Advantages to be described now will be explained in terms of limitations in the way carrier phase information is used conventionally.   Phase measurements are normally expressed as a product of the L-band wavelength multiplied by a sum in the form (integer + fraction) wherein the fraction is precisely measured while the large integer must be determined. When that integer is known exactly the result is of course extremely accurate.  Even the most ingenious methods of integer extraction, however, occasionally produce a highly inaccurate result.   The outcome can be catastrophic and there can be an unacceptably long delay before correction is possible.   Elimination of that possibility provided strong motivation for the scheme described here.

    Linear phase facilitates streaming velocity with GNSS interoperability

    With formation of 1-sec changes, all carrier phases can be forever ambiguous, i.e., the integers can remain unknown; they cancel in forming the sequential differences. Furthermore, discontinuities can be tolerated; a reappearing signal is instantly acceptable as soon as two successive carrier phases differ by an amount satisfying the single-measurement RAIM test.   The technique is especially effective with receivers using FFT-based processing, which provides unconditional access, with no phase distortion, to all correlation cells (rather than a limited subset offered by a track loop).

    Another benefit is subtle but highly significant: acceptability of sub-mask carrier phase changes. Ionospheric and tropospheric timing offsets change very little over a second. Conventional systems are designed to reject measurements from low elevation satellites. Especially in view of improved geometric spread, retention here prevents unnecessary loss of important information.   Demonstration of that occurred in flight when a satelllite dropped to horizon; submask pseudoranges of course had to be rejected, but all of the 1-sec carrier phase changes were perfectly acceptable until the satellite was no longer detectable.

    One additional (deeper) topic, requiring much more rigorous analysis, arises from sequential correlations among 1-sec phase change observables. The issue is thoroughly addressed and put to rest in the later sections of the 5th chapter of GNSS Aided Navigation and Tracking.

    Dead reckoning capability without-IMU was verified in flight, producing decimeter/sec RMS velocity errors outside of turn transients (Section 8.1.2, pages 154-162 of the book just cited). With a low-cost IMU, accuracy is illustrated in the table near the bottom of a 1-page description on this site (also appearing on page 104 of that book). All 1-sec phase increment residual magnitudes were zero or 1 cm for the seven satellites (six across-SV differences) observed at the time shown. Over almost an hour of flight at altitude (i.e., excluding takeoff, when heading uncertainty caused larger lever-arm vector errors), cm/sec RMS velocity accuracy was obtained.