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Method for Improved Performance of Fixed-Gain Self-Alignment in the Temperature Stabilizing State

Sensors (Basel). 2020 Apr 13;20(8):2188. doi: 10.3390/s20082188.

Abstract

Self-alignment (or initial alignment) is the process by which the Inertial Navigation System (INS) is aligned using only measurements from the inertial sensors and the reference navigation information in the stationary state. The main purpose of self-alignment is to calculate the initial attitude of the INS. The accuracy of self-alignment is determined by the performance grade of the inertial sensors, for instance, the accuracy of the horizontal attitude by the horizontal accelerometer and the accuracy of the vertical attitude by the East-axis gyro. Therefore, uncertain errors in the inertial sensors degrade the performance of self-alignment. The focus of this paper is the temperature stabilizing error of accelerometers, a form of uncertain error. An analysis is presented of how the temperature stabilizing error affect the accuracy of self-alignment. From the analysis, a method is proposed to improve performance by curve fitting the horizontal control rates. This is then verified experimentally.

Keywords: curve-fitting; inertial navigation system; self-alignment; temperature stabilizing error.