Title :
Direct versus indirect line of sight (LOS) stabilization
Author :
Kennedy, Peter J. ; Kennedy, Rhonda L.
Author_Institution :
Sensor Technol. Specialists, David H. Pollock Consultants Inc.,, Westwood, NJ, USA
fDate :
1/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Two methods are analyzed for inertially stabilizing the pointing vector defining the line of sight (LOS) of a two-axis gimbaled laser tracker. Mounting the angular rate and acceleration sensors directly on the LOS axes is often used for precision pointing applications. This configuration impacts gimbal size, and the sensors must be capable of withstanding high angular slew rates. With the other stabilization method, sensors are mounted on the gimbal base, which alleviates some issues with the direct approach but may be less efficient, since disturbances are not measured in the LOS coordinate frame. This paper investigates the impact of LOS disturbances and sensor noise on the performance of each stabilization control loop configuration. It provides a detailed analysis of the mechanisms by which disturbances are coupled to the LOS track vector for each approach, and describes the advantages and disadvantages of each. It concludes with a performance comparison based upon simulated sensor noise and three sets of platform disturbance inputs ranging from mild to harsh disturbance environments.
Keywords :
attitude control; optical tracking; stability; LOS stabilization; LOS track vector; acceleration sensors; angular rate sensors; direct line-of-sight stabilization; gimbal size; gimbaled laser tracker; high angular slew rates; indirect line-of-sight stabilization; inertial stabilization; pointing vector; sensor noise; stabilization control loop configuration; Acceleration; Bandwidth; Coordinate measuring machines; Laser noise; Laser stability; Mechanical sensors; Sensor arrays; Servomechanisms; Target tracking; Tracking loops;
Journal_Title :
Control Systems Technology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCST.2002.806443