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Honeywell
successfully demonstrates alternative navigation capabilities
TAGS: Aviation, Global
Navigation Satellite Systems, Honeywell, Innovation:
Technology
Apr 26, 2022
Honeywell has successfully
demonstrated several advanced alternative navigation technologies that are
intended to help ensure seamless navigation, even when GPS signals are blocked,
interrupted or unavailable. These tests took place on both an Embraer E170
aircraft and an AgustaWestland AW139 helicopter.
“Setting a new benchmark”
“Our customers are seeing an
increase in both intentional and unintentional navigational disruptions,
including jamming for GNSS-based navigation,” said Matt Picchetti, vice
president and general manager, Navigation and Sensors, Honeywell Aerospace.
“There hasn’t been a single set of solutions that meet all our customers’
operational needs, so we decided to create one. Our modular and scalable
alternative navigation technologies are setting a new benchmark in terms of
reliability and performance in GNSS-denied environments compared with what is
available in aviation today.”
Alternative navigation technologies
provide vital position, velocity and heading information in GNSS-denied
environments. The successfully demonstrated technologies onboard the E170 and
AW139 include the following:
Vision Aided Navigation
Honeywell’s Vision Aided Navigation
system achieved GPS-like performance on both the Embraer E170 and AW139
platforms during GPS-denied conditions. Additionally, the technology showed 67%
improvement in GPS-denied performance compared with earlier testing last year.
The system uses a live camera feed and compares it with maps to provide a
passive, not jammable, and highly accurate absolute position.
Celestial Aided Navigation
Honeywell’s Celestial Aided
Navigation system on the Embraer E170 achieved an accuracy of 25 meters
circular error probability of 50% (CEP50). This represented a 38% improvement
in GPS-denied performance compared with tests last year. Most importantly, this
is the first time a Resident Space Objects-based (RSOs) navigation solution was
demonstrated on an airborne platform, as most competing solutions rely only on
star-based navigation. The system utilizes a star tracker to observe stars and
RSOs to provide a passive, not jammable solution with GPS-like accuracy in
GPS-denied or spoofed conditions.
Magnetic Anomaly Aided Navigation
Honeywell conducted the world’s
first real-time magnetic anomaly-aided navigation on an airborne platform — the
Embraer E170. This is a historic milestone, as almost all previous magnetic
tests were done in special environments to mitigate electromagnetic noise.
Honeywell demonstrated this passive, not jammable, all-weather, 24/7 technology
on an embedded platform, which measures earth’s magnetic strength and compares
it with magnetic maps to accurately identify the position of the vehicle.
Additionally, Honeywell demonstrated
inertial navigation systems, when paired with the GPSDome (anti-jamming
device), showed significant improvement in position accuracy and integrity
performance in the presence of GPS jamming. The ability of GPSDome to enable
tracking of GPS satellites under more aggressive jamming environments reduces
performance degradations that come with GNSS-denied conditions.
Alternative navigation prototype
systems will be available in 2022, with initial deliveries expected to start in
2023.
Honeywell navigation systems are
used by nearly every aircraft flying today to guide millions of passengers to
their destinations. Since 1914, when the first autopilot used Honeywell
gyroscopes to hold the plane stable during flight, Honeywell has delivered more
than 500,000 high-performance inertial sensors across several platforms on
land, in the air and at sea.
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