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Inertia Navigation Systems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

E. W. Anderson
Affiliation:
(Sperry Gyroscope Company)

Extract

The object of this paper is to present various practical solutions to the problems of inertia navigation in a descriptive rather than a mathematical form. Inertia navigation is an automatic bump of locality, a dead-reckoning device which, starting from a known point, seeks to find position. Other dead-reckoning devices measure speed, which is only relative to the fluid sea or air. Inertia navigation measures accelerations, which are absolute, and hence builds up a measure of speed. The accelerometer is, therefore, a good starting point for our survey.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1958

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References

REFERENCES

1Adams, D. E. (1956). Introduction to inertial navigation. This Journal, 9, 249.Google Scholar
2Cawood, W. (1957). Some design problems in inertia navigation. (Office Nationale d'Éudes et de Recherche Aeronautiques, Paris.)Google Scholar
3Holahan, J. (1957). Three approaches to inertial system design, Aviation Age, Nov. 1957.Google Scholar
4Klass, P. J. (1956). Inertial navigation, Aviation Week, nos. 1–4.Google Scholar