Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures

The quick development of air traffic has led to the improvement of approach and landing operations by using flexible flight paths and by decreasing the minima required to perform these operations. Most of the aircraft operations are supported by the GNSS augmented with GBAS, SBAS and ABAS. SBAS or G...

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Main Author: Vezinet, Jérémy
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://oatao.univ-toulouse.fr/13835/1/vezinet.pdf
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spelling ndltd-univ-toulouse.fr-oai-oatao.univ-toulouse.fr-138352017-10-11T05:09:57Z Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures Vezinet, Jérémy The quick development of air traffic has led to the improvement of approach and landing operations by using flexible flight paths and by decreasing the minima required to perform these operations. Most of the aircraft operations are supported by the GNSS augmented with GBAS, SBAS and ABAS. SBAS or GBAS allow supporting navigation operations down to precision approaches. However, these augmentations do require an expensive network of reference receivers and real-time broadcast to the airborne user. To overcome, the ABAS system integrates on-board information provided by an INS so as to enhance the performance of the navigation system. In that scheme, INS is coupled with a GPS receiver in a GPS/baro-INS hybridization solution that is already performed on current commercial aircraft. This solution allows reaching better performance in terms of accuracy, integrity, availability and continuity than the two separated solutions. However the most stringent requirements for precision approaches or automatic landings cannot be fulfilled with the current hybridization. The main idea of this PhD study is then to extend the hybridization process by including other sensors already available on commercial aircraft or not and, to assess the performance reached by a global hybridization architecture. It aims at providing most of the navigation parameters in all operations with the required level of performance. The operations targeted by this hybridization are precision approaches, with a particular focus on CAT III precision approach and roll out on the runway. The study of video sensor has been particularly focused on in the thesis. Indeed video based navigation is a complete autonomous navigation opportunity only based on sensors that provide information from the dynamic of the vehicle and from the observation of the scenery. Moreover, from a possible compensation of any loss or degradation of a navigation system to the improvement of the navigation solution during the most critical operations, the interests of video are numerous. 2014-12-18 PhD Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf http://oatao.univ-toulouse.fr/13835/1/vezinet.pdf info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Vezinet, Jérémy. Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures. PhD, Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse, 2014 http://ethesis.inp-toulouse.fr/archive/00003048/ http://oatao.univ-toulouse.fr/13835/
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description The quick development of air traffic has led to the improvement of approach and landing operations by using flexible flight paths and by decreasing the minima required to perform these operations. Most of the aircraft operations are supported by the GNSS augmented with GBAS, SBAS and ABAS. SBAS or GBAS allow supporting navigation operations down to precision approaches. However, these augmentations do require an expensive network of reference receivers and real-time broadcast to the airborne user. To overcome, the ABAS system integrates on-board information provided by an INS so as to enhance the performance of the navigation system. In that scheme, INS is coupled with a GPS receiver in a GPS/baro-INS hybridization solution that is already performed on current commercial aircraft. This solution allows reaching better performance in terms of accuracy, integrity, availability and continuity than the two separated solutions. However the most stringent requirements for precision approaches or automatic landings cannot be fulfilled with the current hybridization. The main idea of this PhD study is then to extend the hybridization process by including other sensors already available on commercial aircraft or not and, to assess the performance reached by a global hybridization architecture. It aims at providing most of the navigation parameters in all operations with the required level of performance. The operations targeted by this hybridization are precision approaches, with a particular focus on CAT III precision approach and roll out on the runway. The study of video sensor has been particularly focused on in the thesis. Indeed video based navigation is a complete autonomous navigation opportunity only based on sensors that provide information from the dynamic of the vehicle and from the observation of the scenery. Moreover, from a possible compensation of any loss or degradation of a navigation system to the improvement of the navigation solution during the most critical operations, the interests of video are numerous.
author Vezinet, Jérémy
spellingShingle Vezinet, Jérémy
Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures
author_facet Vezinet, Jérémy
author_sort Vezinet, Jérémy
title Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures
title_short Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures
title_full Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures
title_fullStr Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures
title_full_unstemmed Study of Future On-board GNSS/INS Hybridization Architectures
title_sort study of future on-board gnss/ins hybridization architectures
publishDate 2014
url http://oatao.univ-toulouse.fr/13835/1/vezinet.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT vezinetjeremy studyoffutureonboardgnssinshybridizationarchitectures
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