AE4-393: Avionics Exam Solutions 2008-01-30
AE4-393: Avionics Exam Solutions 2008-01-30
AE4-393: Avionics Exam Solutions 2008-01-30
1. AVIONICS – GENERAL
a) WAAS: Wide Area Augmentation System: an air navigation aid developed by the Federal
Aviation Administration to augment the Global Positioning System (GPS), with the goal
of improving its accuracy, integrity, and availability.
b) HUD: a head-up display, is any transparent display that presents data without requiring
the user to look away from his or her usual viewpoint.
c) LORAN: LOng Range Aid to Navigation is a terrestrial radio navigation system using
low frequency radio transmitters that uses multiple transmitters (multilateration) to
determine location and/or speed of the receiver.
d) ADS-B: Automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast is a cooperative surveillance
technique for air traffic control and related applications.
e) EFIS: An electronic flight instrument system, is a flight deck instrument display system
in which the display technology used is electronic rather than electromechanical.
f) STAR: Standard Terminal Arrival Route defines the route flown between an ATS route
and an approach fix (connects CTA with CTR, trough TMA)
g) AMSS: amplitude modulation signalling system is a digital system for adding low bit
rate information to an analogue amplitude modulated broadcast signal in the same manner
as the Radio Data System (RDS) for frequency modulated (FM) broadcast signals.
h) FIR: Flight Information Region (FIR) is used to describe airspace with specific
dimensions, in which a Flight Information Service and an alerting service are provided. It
is the largest regular division of airspace in use in the world today.
i) FMS: flight management system is a computerized avionics component found on most
commercial and business aircraft to assist pilots in navigation, flight planning, and aircraft
control functions.
j) CNS: Communication, navigation, surveillance
a) If the vehicle acceleration components can be derived along a precisely know set of axes,
successive integration of the acceleration components with respect to time yield the
velocities and distances travelled along these axes (if initial conditions are known).
b) Accelerometers and gyroscopes. An INS can detect a change in its geographic position (a
move east or north, for example), a change in its velocity (speed and direction of
movement), and a change in its orientation (rotation about an axis). It does this by
measuring the linear and angular accelerations applied to the system. Since it requires no
external reference (after initialization), it is immune to jamming and deception.
c) The main INS components the stable platform (gimbaled) IN system and Strapdown IN
system, they work as follows:
1) The gimbaled platform isolates the inertial sensors (accelerometers and gyroscopes)
form the angular motions of the vehicle, i.e. the platform maintains a fixed
orientation with respect to the Earth (Fg). The accelerometer measurements can be
integrated directly in the navigation coordinates (in Fg).
2) In case of Strapdown IN, the inertial sensors are mounted directly on the vehicle.
Algorithms in a digital computer transform the accelerometer measurements form
vehicle coordinates (in Fb) to the navigation coordinates (Fg) , after which the
transformed accelerations are integrated.
With less moving parts and mechanisms than gimbaled systems, strapdown inertial
navigation systems have strongly benefited from the advance of computer technologies,
being built upon electronics, optics, and solid state technology. Perhaps a gimbaled INS's
primary advantage is it's inherently lower error. Since it's three orthogonal accelerometers
are held in a fixed inertial orientation, only the vertically oriented one will be measuring
gravity (and therefore experiencing gravity-related errors).
d) See figure 6.1.
Figure 6.1: The ANALYTIC platform