The present invention relates to a method for determination of the roll angle φ of a rotating body such as a shell, utilizing sensors for detection of rotation signals in a body-fixed coordinate system, in which the body-fixed rotation signals emitted by the sensors are filtered. The invention also relates to a device for determination of the roll angle φ of a rotating body, such as a shell, comprising in the rotating body body-fixed sensors for detection of rotation signals in a body-fixed coordinate system, and a filter device for filtration of interference in the detected rotation signals.
A shell that moves in a ballistic path, see
When rotation sensors are mounted in the shell, it is convenient to define a body-fixed coordinate system by the designation BF (Body Fixed), see
If three rotation-measuring sensors are mounted in the shell in such a way that they measure the rotation around respective body-fixed coordinate axes directly or via a linear combination, the inertial rotation vector can be expressed in the rotational directions ωxBF, ωyBF, ωzBF of the body-fixed coordinate system.
The rotation around the plane-fixed y-axis can then be expressed as measurement signals from the body-fixed rotation sensor signals and the roll angle can thereafter be calculated.
However, the shell is acted upon not only by the g-vector but also by the atmosphere and, in particular, by wind turbulence in the atmosphere. This gives rise to moment interferences around the coordinate axes yBF and zBF. This, in turn, gives rise to rotations in ωyBF and ωzBF. These rotations can be greater by the power of 10 than the rotation ωyPF caused by the effect of the g-vector on the path. In practice, therefore, the simple formula above can not be used to calculate the roll angle directly. In order to handle the body-fixed rotation sensor signals, the signals are therefore filtered. It has, however, proved difficult to filter effectively measurement signals that are non-linear. For example, linear filters of the Kalman type have proved to be difficult to use.
The object of the present invention is to achieve a method and a device for the determination of roll angle that eliminates the rotation signal interferences caused by moment interferences that arise around the body's body-fixed coordinate axes ωyBF and ωzBF in a more effective and a simpler way. The object of the invention is achieved by a method characterized in that a useful measurement signal in the sensors' rotation signals is mixed down to zero in frequency and in that the rotation signals are thereafter low-pass filtered, and a device characterized in that the filter device comprises a mixer for mixing down a useful measurement signal in the sensors' rotation signals to zero in frequency and a low-pass filter for thereafter low-pass filtering the down-mixed rotation signals with useful measurement signal. By means of the invention, a method and a device for the determination of roll angle are achieved that estimate the roll angle in an effective way utilizing a smart non-linear filtration in a manageable low frequency range.
The filter device advantageously comprises a phase-locking filter. In addition to a low-pass filter, the phase-locking filter can comprise sine- and cosine operators, multiplier and amplification regulator.
According to another advantageous embodiment, the filter device comprises a Δφ-eliminator. By this means, a constant error Δφ in the roll angle can be eliminated.
In a suitable embodiment, the AO-eliminator calculates
y=LP_cos(Δφ)*sin(φ+Δφ)−LP_sin(Δφ)*cos(φ+Δφ)
x=LP_sin(Δφ)*sin(φ+Δφ)+LP_cos(Δφ)*cos(φ+Δφ) and
a tan(y/x) in order to obtain φ+W1,
where φ is the roll angle, Δφ is a constant error in the roll angle, LP_ indicates that the next sine or cosine function is low-pass filtered and W1 indicates the noise level of the output signal.
The invention will be described below in greater detail with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The function of the filter device is illustrated in
is originally at the frequency ωxBF and is surrounded by interferences 3, 4 on each side of this frequency, see
is at the frequency zero and the interferences now designated 5 are now superimposed at somewhat higher frequencies than zero. The interferences 5 have now been brought to such a level as far as frequency is concerned that they can be filtered out by means of a low-pass filter.
The down-mixing of the useful signal can be described by the following two equations that are input signals to the lower and upper low-pass filter respectively, see
The roll angle is designated φ and Δφ is the constant error in the roll angle.
By dividing these two signals above and thereafter applying the inverse tangent function, the phase position error Δφ is obtained. This error is amplified by a factor K and the result is a compensation term for ωxBF that means that the filter homes in on zero in phase error irrespective of whether the error is positive or negative at the start of the filtering process. When there is a constant measurement error in the ωxBF-signal, it results in a constant phase error directly out from the phase-locking part of the filter. This constant phase error can be eliminated in a subsequent mathematical processing of the output signal by means of a Δφ-eliminator.
For a description of the function of the filter device with reference to
It can thus be noted that ∂θg/∂t is negatively related to the ωyBF-axis ωzBF-axis, which means that the measurement signal for ωyBF is to be given a minus sign and that the sign is positive for ωzBF.
The filter device 6 according to
y=LP_cos(Δφ)*sin(φ+Δφ)−LP_sin(Δφ)*cos(φ+Δφ)
x=LP_sin(Δφ)*sin(φ+Δφ)+LP_cos(Δφ)*cos(φ+Δφ) and
a tan(y/x) in order to obtain φ+W1,
The calculation unit can consist of a microprocessor that carries out mathematical operations shown in the blocks 9, 10 and 11. The input signals to the Δφ-eliminator are obtained from the phase-locking filter 7 shown in
The phase-locking filter 7 in
The low-pass filters 13 and 14 that are shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0402611-8 | Oct 2004 | SE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/SE05/01600 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 11741063 | Apr 2007 | US |