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The Use of Digital Map Data to Provide Enhanced Navigation and Displays for Poor Weather Penetration and Recovery

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2009

Abstract

A GEC Marconi Avionics/MoD joint–funded integrated, digital terrain system called ' PENETRATE ' (passive enhanced navigation with terrain referenced avionics) is in its fourth year of flight trials on a Hunter fast–jet aircraft at the Defence Research Agency, Farnborough. Although originally designed to enable military aircraft to penetrate enemy defences at low level in poor weather conditions and at night, the system also has a direct read across to civil air transport operations. The heart of the PENETRATE system is a digital data–store housing a three–dimensional model of the terrain including cultural details, obstructions and tactical intelligence information.

PENETRATE incorporates terrain-referenced navigation to provide accurate position information relative to the ground contours. A sophisticated digital map displays navigation information and includes intelligence and intervisibility overlays. Head-up visual enhancement options are provided which can be tailored to the outside visibility. These comprise monochrome skeletal perspective displays which are superimposed on the outside world view and also on the forward-looking infra-red (FUR) scene. The display enhancements range from obstruction cues through ridge line overlays to skeletal perspective terrain presentations.

This paper covers the philosophy and architecture of PENETRATE together with details of the demonstration system. It also discusses the capability of this digital terrain system to enhance the safety of civil aircraft approaches into difficult airports such as Kathmandu and Hong Kong.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1993

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