Radio Navigation Systems
Radio Navigation Systems
Radio Navigation Systems
SYSTEMS
INTRODUCTION
1.1
DEFINITIONS
Guidance
Guidance is Any of various processes
for guiding the path of a vehicle, especially
a missile, by means of built-in equipment.
(1) Steering toward a destination of known
position from the aircrafts present
position.
(2) steering toward a destination without
explicitly measuring the state vector.
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1.1
DEFINITIONS
positioning systems
Radio systems (emphas
is)
Celestial
systems.
Mapping navigation systems.
Each one
has frame
of
reference.
Recording and
integrating the
variation of
position
continuously.
Celestial navigation
Inertial navigation
Radio navigation
Geomagnetism navigation
Infrared Navigation
Laser Navigation
Sonar Navigation
Mapping navigation
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vz
(x,y,z)
vx
vy
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Universal Time
GMT)
System time
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Ture North
Magnetic North
e
Navigation
station
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1. Cost.
2. Accuracy of position and velocity.
3. Autonomy.
4. Time delay in calculating position and velocity,
caused by computational and sensor delays.
5. Geographic coverage.
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6. Automation.
7. Availability.
8. System capacity.
9. Ambiguity.
10. Integrity.
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1. Visual navigation
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2. Lighted beacons
Lighted beacons were installed
across the United States in the
1920s to mark airmail routes.
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6. Downward-looking telescope.
From the 1930s to the 1960s, drift
angle (DA) was measured in flight
with a downward-looking telescope
that observed the direction of
movement of the ground, when it
was visible.
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Figure 1.2