GEC Ferranti piezo vibratory gyroscope
Abstract
Prototypes of a piezo-electric vibratory angular rate transducer (gyroscope) (PVG) have been constructed and evaluated. The construction is on the lines suggested by Burdess. The sensitive element is a cylinder of radially poled piezo-electric ceramic. The cylinder is metallized inside and out, and the outer metallization is divided into eight electrodes. The metallization on the inside is earthed. A phase locked loop, using pairs of the electrodes, causes the cylinder to vibrate in one of its two fundamental, degenerate modes. In the presence of rotation, some of the vibration is coupled into the outer mode. This can be detected, or suppressed with a closed-up technique and provides a measure of rotation rate. The gyroscope provides a number of advantages over rotating mass and optical instruments: low size and mass, lower power consumption, potentially high reliability, potentially good dormancy, low cost and high maximum rate.
- Publication:
-
Microtechnologies and Applications to Space Systems
- Pub Date:
- June 1993
- Bibcode:
- 1993mass.work..265N
- Keywords:
-
- Gyroscopes;
- Piezoelectric Ceramics;
- Angular Velocity;
- Ceramics;
- Electrodes;
- Phase Locked Systems;
- Prototypes;
- Reliability;
- Sensitivity;
- Transducers;
- Vibration Mode;
- Instrumentation and Photography