Aircraft Attitude Determination Using GPS
The new UC technology provides the following benefits: Drastically improves the performance of the navigation system without requiring additional hardware and algorithm; Provides estimation of all other aircraft states, such as position, velocity, and angular rates, without the need for multiple gyros or accelerometers on board.
This new UC technology has applications in aircraft navigation instrumentation.
Scientists at the University of California have developed a new instrument that is capable of accurately estimating all aircraft states, such as position, attitude, velocity, and angular rates. This system can provide the aircraft attitude over the flight envelope and in different exogenous weather conditions by using only the input from a single GPS receiver and the aircraft dynamics.
Patent Number: US6580389B2
Application Number: US2001928099A
Inventor: Speyer, Jason L. | Mutuel, Laurence H.
Priority Date: 11 Aug 2000
Priority Number: US6580389B2
Application Date: 10 Aug 2001
Publication Date: 17 Jun 2003
IPC Current: G01C002116 | G01S000502 | G01S000514 | G01S001921 | G01S001926 | G01S001948 | G01S001949 | G01S001951 | G05D000108
US Class: 34235731 | 34235711
Assignee Applicant: The Regents of the University of California
Title: Attitude determination using a global positioning system
Usefulness: Attitude determination using a global positioning system
Summary: Determining aircraft attitude using GPS.
Novelty: Attitude determination for vehicle orientation determination using GPS supplied position and velocity information and vehicle dynamics information from Kalman filter
Automotive
Driver Assistant
6580389
BACKGROUND Global Positioning System (GPS) technology has come into widespread use and is now becoming a preferred instrument for high accuracy position and velocity estimation in inertial space. However, a stand-alone GPS receiver cannot estimate the attitude of an aircraft and must be coupled with an inertial instrument or use multiple antennas to obtain this information. The result of these additions is an increased cost in hardware and complexity of the navigation system. Additional Technologies by these Inventors Tech ID/UC Case 10207/2000-485-0 Related Cases 2000-485-0
USA
