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Initial Alignment of a Moving Inertial Navigation System

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Richard B. Seeley
Affiliation:
(U.S. Naval Ordnance Test Station)
Roy Dale Cole
Affiliation:
(U.S. Naval Ordnance Test Station)

Abstract

This paper describes and discusses some of the techniques by which a moving inertial platform may be aligned by using external velocity measurements and also presents some of the major problems and error sources affecting such alignment. It is based upon the results of a 3-year study, of inertial and doppler-inertial navigation at the Naval Ordnance Test Station, China Lake, California, and, in general, applies to inertial navigation systems which erect to either the local level or the mass-attraction vertical. Although rudimentary derivations are made of the alignment techniques, the paper is largely nonmathematical for ease of reading. Emphasis is placed upon the major errors affecting the alignment. This paper describes and discusses some of the techniques by which a moving inertial platform may be aligned by using external velocity measurements and also presents some of the major problems and error sources affecting such alignment. It is based upon the results of a 3-year study, of inertial and doppler-inertial navigation at the Naval Ordnance Test Station, China Lake, California, and, in general, applies to inertial navigation systems which erect to either the local level or the mass-attraction vertical. Although rudimentary derivations are made of the alignment techniques, the paper is largely nonmathematical for ease of reading. Emphasis is placed upon the major errors affecting the alignment.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1960

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References

REFERENCES

1Stevens, F. (1958). Aiding the inertial navigation system, Navigation, Los Angeles, 6, 166.Google Scholar
2Adams, D. E. (1956). Introduction to inertial navigation. This Journal, 9, 249.Google Scholar
3O'Donnell, C. F. (1958). Inertial navigation, Parts I and II, J. Franklin Institute, October, 266, 257; November, 266, 373.Google Scholar
4Seeley, R. B., Cole, R. D. (1959). Alignment of moving inertial navigation systems, U.S. Naval Ordnance Test Station, NAVORD Report 6561, NOTS TP 2279.Google Scholar