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I—An Elementary Compound System

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

This paper is concerned with combining the information from a ground-based radio navigation aid (the Decca Navigator) with self-contained sources of dead-reckoning such as air data and doppler. The essentially complementary relationship between D.R. devices and a ground-reference radio system can be exploited so as to produce an airborne navigational system whose merit exceeds that of either component individually. There is, of course, nothing new in a proposition of this kind. It is suggested that a combination such as that of Decca and a self-contained dead-reckoning device can usefully be described as a ‘compound’ system since the whole is formed, to quote the relevant entry in Webster's dictionary, ‘by the aggregation of otherwise independent elements’.

Type
Compound Air Navigation Systems
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1963

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References

REFERENCES

1Stratton, A. (1958). The combination of inertial navigation and radio aids, Proc. Instn. elect. Engrs, 105, B. Supp. 9.Google Scholar
2Gray, T. (1962). The combination of doppler navigator and ground-aided navigation systems, AGARD publication Navigation Systems for Aircraft and Space Vehicles, Pergamon Press, 1962.Google Scholar
3Ramsayer, Karl (1963). Integrated navigation. This Journal, 16, 74.Google Scholar