Paper
27 May 1996 Low-cost inertial/GPS for ballistic missiles with application to unmanned systems
Chris E. Roberts, Philip N. Jenkins, Charles T. Osborn
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Many advances in inertial navigation have been made over the last decade. Small, lightweight inertial measurement units (IMU) have been developed which provide suitable accuracy at a reasonable cost for many unmanned systems. Price has also dropped to previously unheard of levels (under 10,000 dollars for large buys). IMUs can be augmented with global positioning system (GPS) receivers to provide highly accurate and robust navigation capability. GPS receivers have also dropped in size and cost and are becoming an attractive option for coupling with an inertial system. GPS systems alone are vulnerable to jamming and are not a good choice for military applications where jamming is a consideration. Current Army policy is not to use GPS as a mission essential element. The focus of this paper will be on low cost IMUs with GPS and their application to unmanned vehicles. In particular, the program to add guidance to the multiple launch rocket system extended range rocket will be discussed.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chris E. Roberts, Philip N. Jenkins, and Charles T. Osborn "Low-cost inertial/GPS for ballistic missiles with application to unmanned systems", Proc. SPIE 2738, Navigation and Control Technologies for Unmanned Systems, (27 May 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.241085
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KEYWORDS
Global Positioning System

Satellites

Receivers

Missiles

Gyroscopes

Navigation systems

Rockets

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