Inertial navigation without accelerometers
Abstract
The Kennedy-Thorndike (1932) experiment points to the feasibility of fiber-optic inertial velocimeters, to which state-of-the-art technology could furnish substantial sensitivity and accuracy improvements. Velocimeters of this type would obviate the use of both gyros and accelerometers, and allow inertial navigation to be conducted together with vehicle attitude control, through the derivation of rotation rates from the ratios of the three possible velocimeter pairs. An inertial navigator and reference system based on this approach would probably have both fewer components and simpler algorithms, due to the obviation of the first level of integration in classic inertial navigators.
- Publication:
-
Ortung und Navigation
- Pub Date:
- 1986
- Bibcode:
- 1986OrNav........9B
- Keywords:
-
- Accelerometers;
- Fiber Optics;
- Inertial Navigation;
- Navigation Instruments;
- Velocity Measurement;
- Doppler Effect;
- Interferometers;
- Sagnac Effect;
- Instrumentation and Photography