This application is a National Stage of International patent application PCT/EP2008/060701, filed on Aug. 14, 2008, which claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 07 05886, filed on Aug. 17, 2007, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The present invention pertains to a distributed architecture for all aerial navigation aids.
To ascertain its location in flight, with respect to fixed points on the ground, an aircraft receives a certain number of signals transmitted by beacons situated at these points. These signals make it possible to designate either the distance to the fixed point, or an orientation in the horizontal plane tangent to the earth and containing this point, or an orientation with respect to its local vertical. To process these signals, the aircraft is equipped with a constellation of antennas, linked by coaxial cables to dedicated receivers, the latter being installed in an electronic rack close to the flight deck.
Represented in
The part of the electronic rack 2 relating to the radionavigation equipment has been schematically represented. This equipment is: the VOR-1 and 2 receivers, the DME-1 and 2 transmitters-receivers, the ILS-LOC and GS 1 and 2 receivers, the ADF 1 and 2 receivers, and the GPS 1 and 2 receivers. The digital interfaces (not represented) of these transmitters and receivers are linked by a digital bus 3 to a central computer 4. The various transmitters and receivers are linked by coaxial cables (denoted “coax” in the drawing) to the corresponding antennas.
The processing of the navigation signals by the receivers is manifested, inter alia, in the form of visual indications (dials, screens, counters, lights) and audible indications (Morse codes transmitted by the beacons and constituting their signatures).
The specific drawback of this architecture is that the electronic rack takes up a great deal of room, and that the aircraft is traversed by a large number of coaxial cables, which themselves represent a large volume and especially a significant mass. These cables are moreover expensive, since they are chosen so as to exhibit minimum losses in the transport of information and to have very effective shielding against electromagnetic disturbances.
Part of the problem can be solved by replacing the coaxial cables with links based on optical fibers, but though this makes it possible to decrease the weight and volume of the cables, it does not solve the problem of the volume of the electronic rack and requires the installation of components whose integrity level is not well known in the field of onboard aeronautics.
Another factor influencing the weight is that each receiver, today, has its own power supply, that is to say a DC/DC electrical converter making it possible to produce on the basis of the energy provided by the aircraft ( 19/37 VDC) all the DC voltages (±10V, ±15V, ±5V, 3.3V) that are required in order to operate.
The subject of the present invention is an architecture of avionics electronic equipment comprising a system for aiding aerial navigation and, if appropriate, a system of sensors of quantities outside the aircraft and a communication system, this architecture being embedded in an aircraft comprising several antennas and sensors linked to equipment onboard the aircraft, these antennas and sensors being installed at various locations distributed over its exterior surface, this architecture having to make it possible to reduce the weight and/or the bulk of the cables linking the antennas and sensors to the corresponding equipment, as well as the weight and/or the bulk of at least part of said equipment.
The architecture in accordance with the invention is characterized in that part at least of the transmitters and/or receivers is sited remotely in or in proximity to the corresponding antennas, and in that these remotely sited transmitters and/or receivers are linked by digital links to the computer of the electronic rack.
In an advantageous manner, a part at least of the power supply for the equipment of the aircraft is centralized, and this centralized supply distributes a stabilized DC power supply to the remotely sited equipment.
The present invention will be better understood on reading the detailed description of an embodiment, taken by way of nonlimiting example and illustrated by the appended drawing in which:
The solution of the invention is to remotely site at least part of the receivers in the antennas, or in proximity to the latter. These receivers communicate with the central navigation computer by digital link, this representing a negligible mass and volume with respect to the coaxials. In certain cases, this weight improvement can reach about 90%.
The electronic rack is thus freed from a significant share of the present volume, since the RF part (first stage of the receivers at the antenna output) of the receivers is generally that which takes up the greatest volume. This also makes it possible to simplify the design of the receivers since because they are no longer alongside one another, the danger of them mutually interfering is diminished.
When all the transmitters-receivers are sited remotely, the electronic rack then contains only a central computer which communicates by digital bus with all the remotely sited receivers, drives them, manages the information that they deliver so as to transmit the synthetic information required by the flight deck to the latter.
According to another characteristic of the invention, the power supply part which distributes stabilized DC power supplies to the remotely sited receivers is centralized. Indeed the power supply part of present receivers also takes up a non-negligible volume of these receivers and requires particular protection in order that the operations that it performs do not disturb the working of the remainder of the receiver. Therefore the repercussions thereof in terms of volume and mass are correspondingly reduced.
Represented in
Furthermore, in certain cases (ILS, VOR and DME receivers), an analog audio output of the circuit 9 is linked by an ordinary shielded cable 9A to audio circuits of the flight deck
According to the invention, and as represented in
As a variant, the remotely sited receivers can be integrated into the antennas (which are then of the “smart antennas” type). At present, an antenna of this type is protected by a radome fixed to the “skin” of the aircraft, outside the aircraft, and is linked by a very short coaxial cable (for example a few centimeters in length) to a decentralized module termed “INM” (“Integrated Navigation Module”) disposed inside the aircraft's “skin”, very near the latter, this module being linked by a digital bus to the centralized corresponding receiver.
Represented schematically in
The difference between a radionavigation installation of the prior art and an installation in accordance with the invention has been illustrated with the aid of
Only two antennas 27 and 28 (and more precisely the radomes enclosing these antennas) of a radionavigation system have been represented in
Shown diagrammatically in
All the receivers of the radionavigation system, such as the receiver 39 (or 40) are linked to a digital bus 41, itself linked to the computer control logic 34 of the rack 35, this logic and the computer being for example those represented in
It is thus noted that the architecture of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07 05886 | Aug 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2008/060701 | 8/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 2/17/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/024532 | 2/26/2009 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110022249 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |