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Wednesday, June 17, 2015

NASA Completes Third Hot Fire Test of SLS Engine (Video)

As reported by Aerospace Technology.comNasa has completed the third hot fire test of an RS-25 engine of the Space Launch System (SLS) at its Stennis Space Center near Bay St Louis, Mississippi, US.

The agency has fired the engine for up to 500 seconds.
SLS is Nasa's new rocket, which is being designed to send astronauts on future missions beyond Earth's orbit at speeds of 17,500 mph. It will be equipped with four RS-25 engines.
Nasa Marshall Space Flight Center SLS liquid engines office manager Steve Wofford said: "While we are using proven space shuttle hardware with these engines, SLS will have different performance requirements.
"That's why we are testing them again. This is a whole new ballgame, we need way more power for these engines to be able to go farther than ever before when it comes to human exploration."
Nasa conducted the first RS-25 test in the series on 9 January, and the second test on 28 May. The agency is preparing to conduct four more tests as part of the current development engine.
"We need way more power for these engines to be able to go farther than ever before when it comes to human exploration."
The tests are designed to demonstrate the performance of the engines with colder liquid oxygen temperatures, greater inlet pressure and higher vehicle acceleration, more nozzle heating, and its position with the SLS booster exhaust nozzles.
During the tests, the new ablative insulation and heaters will also be evaluated.
"We have several objectives that will be accomplished during this test series, which will provide critical data on the new engine controller unit, materials and engine propellant inlet pressure conditions," Wofford added.
Sacramento, California-based Aerojet Rocketdyne serves as the prime contractor for the RS-25 engine program.
Designated Exploration Mission 1, the SLS first test flight will have 77t lift capacity, and will carry an uncrewed Orion spacecraft beyond low-Earth orbit. Going forward, it will be enhanced with lift capability of 143t to facilitate missions even farther into solar system to destinations such as Mars.


Wi-Fi and LTE Join-Up for Gigabit Mobile Services

As reported by CIO: What happens if you combine the best of Wi-Fi and cellular networks? In South Korea, consumers get gigabit-speed service to their phones.

Samsung Electronics and mobile operator KT have developed a hybrid technology called GiGA LTE that can bring LTE and Wi-Fi signals together for download speeds as high as 1.17Gbps (bits per second), according to The Korea Herald. GiGA LTE is available now with a firmware upgrade to Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge handsets.

Wi-Fi and LTE are becoming wary neighbors as cellular operators look for more spectrum and all types of wireless networks face growing user demands. Carriers are looking into LTE-Unlicensed, which can transmit LTE signals in the same band with Wi-Fi, and Qualcomm is now exploring a technology that would let more types of operators set up those networks. Some Wi-Fi backers say LTE-Unlicensed could squeeze out wireless LAN users.

GiGA LTE uses KT’s own network of Wi-Fi hotspots, of which there are about 140,000 around South Korea, along with its approximately 200,000 LTE base stations, The Korea Herald said. KT plans to gradually increase the coverage area of the fast hybrid network and make it available on more phones: It will be available for five or six more Samsung models and some LG Electronics phones in the second half of the year.

The gigabit-plus throughput that GiGA LTE can achieve is four times faster than the fastest LTE service in the Korea, which uses LTE-Advanced features to combine three frequency bands and is already among the world’s fastest.
Alcatel-Lucent introduced a system earlier this year, called Wi-Fi boost, that uses a cellular connection just for upstream traffic and Wi-Fi strictly for downloads. It could provide up to a 70 percent increase in download speed and an order of magnitude faster uplinks, the company said. It plans to start selling Wi-Fi boost in the second half of this year. A later version will allow the two networks to combine their download signals, Alcatel said.

Rival carrier SK Telecom also plans to commercialize hybrid Wi-Fi and LTE network technologies this month with partner LG Electronics, The Korea Herald said.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

A New iPhone Feature Can Save Children's Lives

As reported by HuffPost TechApproximately 40 children die each year from heat stroke after being left in cars by distracted, absentminded or careless parents. And that is in the U.S. alone. A minor update to Apple's smartphone operating system could help to prevent these accidents from happening in the future.

iPhone users have long been able to set reminders based on particular locations. For example, you can tell your iPhone: 'Open a bottle of wine when I get home,' and if you've previously told your iPhone where you live it will use the 'geofence' around your house to know when you get in and prompt you with the reminder. Apple spent just a few seconds at its latest event showing off geofences for your car.
If you have CarPlay (Apple's solution for safely using an iPhone in the vehicle) your car will now be recognized as a location and you'll be able to set reminders based on entering or exiting your vehicle.
From here the solution is simple: Set a reminder such as "Siri, remind me every day when I get out of the car: check for kids!" And a reminder will appear as you walk away from the car, replacing possible catastrophe with slight embarrassment. Do I want to admit to myself that it's possible to forget my kids in the car? Probably, not. But is it possible? The facts are indisputable: yes, it is. And I would rather admit it and take practical steps to prevent it, than deny it and avoid those steps.
Several companies including Intel, BabyAlert and others are developing innovative preventive measures such as microchips and sensors installed inside car seats to reduce these accidental deaths.
Smartphone reminders may not replace these entirely, and nothing can negate the need for attentive and careful parenting, but a simple reminder to make sure you've left no one behind could be one piece in saving a child's life.

It's Official: SpaceX Is Building Elon Musk's Hyperloop

As reported by Motherboard: SpaceX is building a hyperloop, Elon Musk's fantastical, futuristic transport tube capable of moving people and freight at speeds of 760 miles per hour.

The company is building a one- to three-mile-long hyperloop test track outside its Hawthorne, California headquarters with plans to test the technology within a year, according to documents obtained by Motherboard (embedded below). It's the first time that Musk, who conceived of the hyperloop, has been involved with any concrete plans to actually build it.

"SpaceX will be constructing a sub-scale test track (inner diameter between 4 and 5 feet; length approximately 1 mile) adjacent to its Hawthorne, California headquarters)," an official SpaceX document, called "SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition," said. "In order to accelerate the development of a functional prototype and to encourage student innovation, SpaceX is moving forward with a competition to design and build a half-scale Hyperloop pod."


"In addition to hosting the competition, SpaceX will likely build a pod for demonstration purposes only," the document said.

Musk offhandedly mentioned that he was working on a "fifth mode of transportation" in the summer of 2012, but said he didn't have the time necessary to work on it, with SpaceX, Tesla Motors, and SolarCity taking up the bulk of his time. But the public reaction to the hyperloop was so positive that, in August 2013, he and some SpaceX engineers drew up a highly detailed white paper describing a hyperloop that would shuttle passengers and cargo between Los Angeles and San Francisco in 35 minutes.

"We are interested in helping to accelerate development of a functional hyperloop prototype"

After Musk released the white paper, he made no indication that SpaceX or any other of his companies was actually working on the fantastical hyperloop. Instead, the paper, plans, and design were open sourced so that any company or engineer could work on the design.

Two companies, Hyperloop Transportation Technologies and Hyperloop Technologies, have started work on commercial hyperloops; Hyperloop Transportation Technologies announced last month that it is planning to build a five-mile test track in California. Neither Musk nor SpaceX has anything to do with those companies, and the SpaceX test track will be the first official project he's been involved with.


The hyperloop would consist of a steel, partially pressurized tube and various "pods" or "capsules" that can carry people, freight, and potentially cars.

“Just as aircraft climb to high altitudes to travel through less dense air, Hyperloop encloses the capsules in a reduced pressure tube,” Musk wrote in the white paper. “The pressure of air in the Hyperloop is about ⅙ the pressure of the atmosphere on Mars … a hard vacuum is avoided as vacuums are expensive and difficult to maintain compared with low pressure solutions.”

Motors on the pods themselves would create a cushion of air that would allow the pods to float within the tube, and they would be pushed along the tube by linear induction motors positioned along the inside of the tubes. These tubes would be powered by solar panels mounted on their outer surface.

Musk has said that for cities less than 900 miles apart, the hyperloop would be faster and cheaper than air travel and better than existing trains in just about every way. It would travel at just under the speed of sound, for passenger comfort and safety.

According to the company, SpaceX has no plans to actually build a commercial hyperloop like the one proposed in the white paper. Instead, the company is trying to spur innovation and attention to the design, and it wants to prove that the concept actually works. SpaceX told me that it's happy two companies are actually trying to design and build commercial hyperloops, and that the company does not want to compete with them. SpaceX's primary focus is still on spaceflight and on eventually sending humans to Mars.

"We are excited that a handful of private companies have chosen to pursue this effort," the company said. "While we are not developing a commercial hyperloop ourselves, we are interested in helping to accelerate development of a functional hyperloop prototype."

In the contest, teams of university students will be tasked with designing passenger pods and presenting them at a meet up with SpaceX officials at Texas A&M University in January, 2016. The best designs will actually be built at half scale and will be tested in June of 2016 at the SpaceX hyperloop test track. These pods will apparently be large enough to put a human inside, but will be tested without passengers.

In the white paper, Musk showed what a pod might look like:





SpaceX says it will release more information about the contest, such as technical details, in August. For now, you can check out the document announcing the contest below.

Spacex Hyperloop Pod Competition

Monday, June 15, 2015

Uber is Using GPS to Punish Drivers in China Who Get Too Close to Protests

As reported by FusionUber is using GPS on drivers’ phones to identify, and threaten, drivers loitering by taxi protests in China, the Wall Street Journal reports.

For months, there’s been tension in the country between ride-share companies and taxi drivers, who fear the new companies will make it even harder for them to make a living. Bloomberg View’s Adam Minter pointed out the severity of the situation:
“Drivers have not hesitated to disrupt the public’s daily life. In January, when drivers in at least six major cities decided to strike, they didn’t just stop working; they blocked traffic, and even besieged private cars associated with taxi hailing apps. In at least one instance, riot police were forced to intervene.”
That anger has prompted China to come down especially hard on Uber, says Minter:
“China’s crackdown on Uber, in other words, may have less to do with protecting the owners of politically powerful taxi services than placating the taxi industry’s increasingly volatile labor force.”
So Uber’s been in a shaky place, both with the government and with the taxi-driving community, for a long time now. But the incident that prompted Uber to explicitly warn drivers away from participating in protests, however, happened on Friday. On that day, a local official in Guangzhou reportedly hailed a car driven by one of Uber’s ride-share competitors, Didi Kuaidi. The official tried to arrest the driver, and set another major protest in motion. Quartz describes the scene:
“Dozens of Didi Kuaidi drivers who apparently caught news of the attempted sting surrounded the vehicle, waving signs in support of Didi and demanding the official, who was inside the car, let the driver off the hook. The mass of supporters blocked traffic, and police arrived to break up the crowds, photos posted on Sina Weibo (log-in required) show.”
The next day, Uber told its drivers to keep away from such protests. The Financial Times reports that Uber drivers in Hangzhou received a message imploring them: “Please don’t wreck the good urban environment you have all worked so hard to help build… If you are at the scene, leave immediately.”
More damningly, the message added that there would be consequences for those who didn’t follow instructions, and that Uber would track drivers’ GPS devices (i.e., personal phones) to make sure they comply. These measures, reports the WSJ, are intended to “maintain social order.” Not something you want to hear from an employer.
An Uber spokesperson in Beijing told Quartz that “we firmly oppose any form of gathering or protest, and we encourage a more rational form of communication for solving problems.”
It makes sense for Uber to tread lightly in China, where it is reportedly planning a rapid expansion, with a price tag of more than one billion dollars. Maybe Uber should spend some of that money figuring out how to deal with its (many) privacy issues, first.
Uber did not respond to requests for comment.

China Confirms Test of Hypersonic Glide Vehicle

As reported by YibadaThe People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has confirmed reports that it has conducted a fourth test of China's ultra-high-speed hypersonic glide vehicle for nuclear delivery called the WU-14, Bill Gertz, senior editor of the Washington Free Beacon, wrote in an article published on June 11.

According to the article, China conducted the test on June 7, which was the fourth in the series of tests on the WU-14 in the past 18 months.
The WU-14 was believed to be on PLA's high-priority list for development, the U.S. intelligence said.
The first WU-14 test reportedly took place on Jan. 9, 2014, followed by two more tests on Aug. 7 and Dec. 2. The report said that all four tests have been conducted at the same facility in western China.
The article quoted a U.S. intelligence official as saying that the latest test showed the WU-14's ability and "extreme maneuvers" to penetrate U.S. missile defense systems, for the first time.
The official said that the WU-14 was allegedly designed to neutralize U.S. strategic missile defenses and has the unique capability to fly at ultra-high speeds and maneuver to avoid detection and tracking by radar and missile defense interceptors.The Missile Defense Agency of the Pentagon, however, refused to make any comment on the development of the WU-14, although a U.S. congressional report published in November last year said that China's hypersonic glide vehicles cannot only make U.S. missile defense system less effective but also render it obsolete.
Gertz said that in addition to the WU-14, the Chinese government is also developing a second hypersonic weapon using scramjet engine technology.

Friday, June 12, 2015

Precision GPS: On the Road to Driverless

Land-vehicle autonomous navigation requires centimeter-level qualification tools to enable confidence build-up for delivery to open-road traffic insertion. External positioning sensors over a dedicated road section can be replaced with an embedded high-accuracy, highly responsive epoch-by-epoch differential GNSS receiver coupled with an inertial navigation system. The demonstrated absolute accuracy and mobility extends the potential test area and minimizes cost for multi-environment validation. 
As reported by GPSWorld:  Personal cars and commercial trucks are continuously improving the driver experience and safety thanks to integration of more significant and machine-assisted control systems. Advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) are now integrated in all luxury cars and moving into mainstream products. Technologies covered by ADAS are specific for each car integrator, but increasingly they include now involving more safety features, such as driver assistance and partial delegation to autonomous control for small maneuvers such as lane control. The generation of ADAS systems introduced in early 2015 on high-end models are engaging more intelligence from the control system such as:
  • Lane departure warning system
  • Speed assistance and control
  • Driver assistance and control
  • Autonomous emergency braking.
It is not only individual drivers who want this technology, but also governments that are getting involved to prevent accidents and minimize the economic impact associated with them. In the European Union, the general safety regulation 2009/661 was the first step to engage member-states to act as a regulator to mandate car safety improvements. The European Transport Safety Council, a non-profit private association, released in March 2015 a position paper titled “Revision of the General Safety Regulation 2009/661.” It promotes the introduction of lifesaving technologies like intelligent speed assistance, autonomous emergency technology including all speed and pedestrian detection, and lane-departure warning systems as the next step of regulation.
Car manufacturers are not far behind. They understand their customers’ expectation of minimized risk and enhanced driving experience. Telematics is also a path to convert a single vehicle into a fully intelligent, connected and entertainment object with an associated high value. So every car manufacturer is willing to be seen as a technology master.
Toyota, for example, plans to integrate collision-prevention technology in all its mainstream and luxury cars by 2017. The ADAS new generation focuses on radar-activated cruise control technology for the collision-prevention system. The control system maintains distance from a vehicle ahead and can stop the car if driver doesn’t react. The next step is to monitor driver attention with sensors like cameras focusing on the driver’s eyes, and the pressure of the hand on the steering wheel.
However, no fully driverless car is expected in the next 10 years. This technology is limited by legal issues and the lack of reliable nationwide mapping data.
Since the technology must be fully proven to prevent any lethal threat on the user and other drivers, most car and truck companies are working actively on qualifying driverless technology today. Nissan began testing driver-assist technology on open-road traffic in Japan in late 2013. It enables highly advanced systems such as lane-keeping, automatic lane change, automatic exit, automatic overtaking of slower or stopped vehicles, automatic deceleration during congestion on freeways, and automatic stopping at red lights. This is a step towards attaining fully automatic driving, targeted for 2020 by Nissan.
Some European manufacturers such as Daimler Benz are also early adopters. Daimler/Mercedes uses the Bertha Benz prototype car to test autonomous driving technologies. It merged multiple vision, radar and GPS sensor with digital map to monitor an open-road 100-kilometer trip in August 2013 (Figure 1).
Figure 1.  Bertha Benz test car, left, running fully autonomous 103-kilometer trip in open road including 27 percent narrow urban roads. Right, networked sensor systems of the S 500 Intelligent Drive research vehicle.
Figure 1. Bertha Benz test car, left, running fully autonomous 103-kilometer trip in open road including 27 percent narrow urban roads. Right, networked sensor systems of the S 500 Intelligent Drive research vehicle.
All manufacturers are building driverless capability into their technology demonstration concept cars:
  • Mercedes with F 015 Luxury presented at the Consumer Electronic Show, early 2015;
  • Audi with Prologue, an extrapolation of test car RS7 concept equipped with SuperFast driverless pilot;
  • BMW’s electric i3 car is integrating ActiveAssist technology that enables portions of drive to be without any manual intervention, such as car parking and autonomous rally to a meeting point;
  • Google’s self-driving vehicle that conforms to California license requirements for driverless tests in open traffic;
  • Tesla model SD autonomous test car.
Although most market leaders agree that this is not a technology for mainstream production in the next few years, they all work very efficiently to master the technologies. It is a big challenge to integrate all the sensors and the navigation functions to autonomously and accurately position the vehicle on a map. The whole system must be certified to prevent any liability in case of a crash, a case that would engage the solution provider and the vehicle manufacturer.
A large part of the qualification task will benefit from simulations and integration testing platforms in realistic conditions. At the very least, a very robust final open-space validation test must take place. Car manufacturers/integrators are using private test facilities in open air to perform serious trials before proceeding to real traffic conditions. Renault uses a 10-square-kilometer facility in France (Figure 2) to perform private tests in a protected area.
Figure 2. Renault outdoor test center at Aubevoye, France.
Figure 2. Renault outdoor test center at Aubevoye, France.
New autonomous car drive tests have mandated equipment enabling measurement of the car’s position on the track with an extremely high precision and repeatability. There are two competing technologies to do this:
  • Install many location sensors on the test track;
  • Use a general absolute positioning system.
Here we focus on an absolute positioning system that is affordable, easy to install and low maintenance. It is based on two main assertions:
  • The autonomous pilot can position accurately on the test track;
  • The test track is accurately referenced to the absolute positioning system.
We focus more closely in this article on the first assertion; the second one can be covered with a specific calibration trial where equipment, as discussed further, can be used in quasi-static mode and experience consistent accuracy. Let us have a deeper look at the candidate position technologies to verify autonomous pilot accuracy.

Positioning Technologies

Many technologies have been proposed to obtain vehicle position on the course. However, they all must be compatible with a reliable mapping database. Given the lack of consistent road infrastructure equipment with alternative capabilities, GNSS positioning is the sole enabling method to fit to a map every place around the world. That is why driverless systems always include a GNSS sensor to help other data matching with the map. The versatility and low cost of GNSS positioning makes it a candidate for open-air validation as well.
Standalone Standard Positioning Service GPS. The SPS single-frequency GPS receivers are included in so many nomadic appliances today that they are a commodity. Since their introduction 20 years ago, their performance is well understood. Some trials were performed in different area profiles with satellite constellation position dilution of precision (PDOP) < 2. Worse results were obtained from deep urban canyons in downtown Seattle, Wash.
For every technology, the relevant performance for the test course is the lateral error to the expected center of the lane in the two horizontal dimensions, referred to as 2D or N/E for orientation north and east.
For standalone SPS GPS, the lateral error standard deviation in 2D can be as high as 46 meters and have peak errors up to 660 meters. Lateral error in 3D can be as high as 20 meters with peak errors up to 175 meters.
Such performances are out of range for any positioning verification. It can only deliver a rough estimate of the point on the map, but would not provide tight correlation with other sensors for the navigation system.
Hybridized IMU and SPS GPS. Coupling of an absolute navigation GPS receiver with an inertial measurement unit (IMU) can mitigate corruption of the navigation solution when intermittent GPS signal outage is encountered. The hybrid approach is beneficial on any difficult signal transmission path from the satellite that is not line-of-sight: in urban canyons, deep foliage, under bridges, tunnels and in any multipath area. It also yields benefits in the very short term (less than a few seconds) for dispersion on the position computed from the sky.
Over the last 10 years, the combined benefits of micro-electro-mechanical sensors (MEMS) and tight coupling algorithms have raised the bar of positioning accuracy. It enables smoothed position along track and dead reckoning (DR) in case of GNSS signal outage.
Lateral error standard deviation in 2D is lowered to 2.3 meters and peak error up to 10 meters. However, this performance is still too poor to validate a vehicle position in the lane.
Hybrid Differential Single Frequency and IMU. The next step to mitigate systematic errors of the GNSS system is to use a set of multiple reference receivers in the vicinity of the area covering the test course. The reference receivers are static. The position of the reference is determined using long-term averages to mitigate constellation errors. A minimum for a position fix of 20 minutes is commonly reported. Then the position error standard deviation in 2D is less than 2 centimeters for baselines shorter than 100 kilometers.
For a MEMS integrated with a standard SPS GPS single-frequency receiver with DGPS correction on a mobile platform moving at less than 70 km/hour with HDOP < 1.4, Table 1 compares performance in a 2013 test.
Table 1.IMU performance grades.
Table 1.IMU performance grades.
Table 2. Horizontal error performance.
Table 2. Horizontal error performance.
Hybrid Differential Dual-Frequency Carrier Phase and IMU. The GNSS solution can be further improved, taking into account both L1 and L2 frequencies to mitigate propagation error and carrier phase to achieve ultimate signal accuracy. The combination of both helps solve ambiguities associated with the carrier-phase technique. When combined with a MEMS IMU, accuracy confirmed with HDOP < 1.6 is:
  • Lateral error standard deviation down to 0.18 meters;
  • Peak error of 0.6 meter.
However, this is still insufficient accuracy when compared to 0.1 meter required for verification testing.
With such low-cost IMU, GPS outages produce a rapidly increasing lateral error over elapsed time. The lower the speed, the poorer the position result.
Another limitation common to many differential solutions is the turn-on delay for the solution. It is also a repetitive issue in case of disruption of the GNSS solution. It extends the delay to recover from DR situation.

Geodetics’ Epoch-by-Epoch

Geodetics Inc. has developed a new class of instantaneous, real-time precise GPS positioning and navigation algorithms, referred to as Epoch-by-Epoch (EBE) and employing hybridized dual-frequency differential GPS with a high-performance IMU.
Compared to conventional real-time kinematic (RTK), integer-cycle phase ambiguities are independently estimated for each and every observation epoch. Therefore, complications due to cycle slips, receiver loss-of-lock, power and communications outages, and constellation changes are minimized. There is no need for the initialization period (several seconds to several minutes) required by conventional RTK methods.
More importantly, there is no need for re-initialization immediately following loss-of-lock problems such as those that occur when a mobile GPS receiver passes under a bridge or other obstruction, or when it loses satellite visibility during a shaded portion of road. In addition, EBE provides precise positioning estimates over longer reference-receiver-to-user-receiver baselines than conventional RTK.
This feature supports testing for long-range operations, for example, such as positioning a vehicle on a lane. The reference receiver is set in the vicinity of the test center track.
EBE requires the use of a minimum of two receivers, each of which is tracking a common set of five or more satellites and providing simultaneous dual-frequency phase data. Typically, one of the receivers is stationary, but this is not a requirement.
EBE has been proven utilizing dual-frequency receivers and operating at distances of up to 50 kilometers from the nearest base station in unaided mode. Additionally, the EBE algorithms operate in a network environment and make optimal use of all GPS measurement data at each epoch, gracefully degrading the position accuracies when some measurement data are not available. Furthermore, the system will make use of an IMU system, compensating for outages when line-of-sight to the satellites is blocked. This produces a robust and more reliable system.
Epoch-by-Epoch can deliver several benefits including:
  • Computationally efficient algorithms that provide a position estimate based on a single epoch in several milliseconds. This allows the real-time position estimate to be computed on the user platform (assuming reference station data is sent to the user platform).
  • An initialization period is not required. Since RTK requires some period of time (that can be measured in seconds to minutes) to perform ambiguity resolution, this is an important capability for platforms that:
    • require high accuracy (for example, for end-game scoring);
    • cannot see the satellites until launch;
    • have short flight or test course duration;
  • A re-initialization period following loss-of-lock is not required, unlike RTK, which needs to restart the integer-cycle phase ambiguity resolution process. This is another important capability because vehicle monitoring is considering EBE for dynamic applications where loss-of-lock and loss-of-data are likely.
However, it must be mentioned that many of the GPS receivers in use by the test (and training) community today do not support this dual-frequency requirement. Hence, those systems could not realize the maximum benefit.
This technology is implemented in a rugged modular platform (Figure 3) with three main units:
  • A dual-frequency GPS antenna,
  • An integrated INS coupling GPS receiver with either an internal MEMS IMU or external IMU,
  • An external fiber-optic gyroscope (FOG) IMU for high-end accuracy and reliability. The external IMU is optional and dedicated to increasing the DR capability.
Figure 3. Dual-frequency differential navigation unit hybridized with external fiber-optic gyro.
Figure 3. Dual-frequency differential navigation unit hybridized with external fiber-optic gyro.
Performance. Tests have been performed in conditions close to the land-vehicle navigation validation. It is based on measurements on-the-fly with no post-processing except for evaluation of the error.
The first case is a static position of the rover 4.8 kilometers away from the reference receiver. Positions are updated once per second. The system includes a FOG IMU. the lateral error peak is less than 4 centimeters. Bias error is less than 1 centimeter. See Figure 4.
Figure 4.  Single point error when rover is static.
Figure 4. Single point error when rover is static.
The second test case is with a high-dynamic mobile platform, moving at a speed of 200 km/h, with an average distance from the reference to the rover of 6 kilometers. Lateral error standard deviation is 0.5 centimeters, peak error is less than 2.2 centimeters. Bias error is lower than 0.2 centimeters (Figure 5).
Figure 5.  Dynamic trial test single point error.
Figure 5. Dynamic trial test single point error.
The performance in these test cases meets the expected accuracy for validation of autonomous navigation.
One last method to increase accuracy is to switch to a different class of IMU performance, from tactical grade to advanced. When in the line-of-sight of the GNSS sky-view, the performance is the nearly the same.

Conclusion

A real-time, differential Epoch-by-Epoch, dual-frequency carrier-phase GPS receiver, tightly hybridized with a high-performance IMU can provide absolute error lower than 5 centimeters in the 10-kilometer baseline range of the reference static receiver. This is fully adapted to the qualification of driverless auto-pilot systems for the targeted year of 2020. It can avoid the need to use complex theodolite and vision calibration systems. It provides maximum flexibility  and minimum sustaining costs.