Global Positioning System Denied Navigation of Autonomous Parafoil Systems Using Beacon Measurements From a Single Location

Author:

Cacan Martin R.1,Costello Mark2,Scheuermann Edward3

Affiliation:

1. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Center for Advanced Machine Mobility, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30322 e-mail:

2. David S. Lewis Professor of Autonomy, Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering, Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Center for Advanced Machine Mobility, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30322

3. Earthly Dynamics Corporation, Atlanta, GA 30309

Abstract

Precision-guided airdrop systems have shown considerable accuracy improvements over more widely used unguided systems through high-quality position, velocity, and time feedback provided by global positioning system (GPS). These systems, like many autonomous vehicles, have become solely dependent on GPS to conduct mission operations. This necessity makes airdrop systems susceptible to GPS blackout in mountainous or urban terrain due to multipathing issues or from signal jamming in active military zones. This work overcomes loss of GPS through an analysis of guidance, navigation and control (GNC) capabilities using a single radio frequency (RF) beacon located at the target. Such a device can be deployed at the target by ground crew on site to retrieve package delivery. Two novel GNC algorithms are presented, which use either range from or direction to a RF beacon. Simulation and experimental flight testing results indicated that beacon-based methods can achieve similar results as GPS-based methods. This technology provides a simple and elegant solution to GPS blackout with best method studied showing only a 21% decrease in landing accuracy in comparison to GPS-based methods.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Mechanical Engineering,Instrumentation,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering

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