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Aircraft Navigation System Kayton Fried

This document is the table of contents for the book "Avionics Navigation Systems, Second Edition" by Myron Kayton and Walter R. Fried. The book covers various topics related to aircraft navigation systems. Chapter 1 provides an introduction and overview, including definitions of navigation terms, categories of navigation, phases of flight, and the evolution of air navigation technologies. Chapter 2 discusses navigation equations and computations. Chapter 3 covers multisensor navigation systems, including inertial navigation systems, integrated GPS and inertial systems, and Kalman filtering techniques. The book provides technical details on aircraft navigation systems and their components.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
285 views

Aircraft Navigation System Kayton Fried

This document is the table of contents for the book "Avionics Navigation Systems, Second Edition" by Myron Kayton and Walter R. Fried. The book covers various topics related to aircraft navigation systems. Chapter 1 provides an introduction and overview, including definitions of navigation terms, categories of navigation, phases of flight, and the evolution of air navigation technologies. Chapter 2 discusses navigation equations and computations. Chapter 3 covers multisensor navigation systems, including inertial navigation systems, integrated GPS and inertial systems, and Kalman filtering techniques. The book provides technical details on aircraft navigation systems and their components.

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Avionics Navigation Systems, Second Edition

Myron Kayton and Walter R. Fried


John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
1997
(Navtech order #1014)

Table of Contents

Preface ........................................................................................................ xvii


Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................... xxi
List of Contributors ............................................................................................................ 1

Chapter I: Introduction ............................................................................................................ 1


Myron Kayton
1.1 Definitions ............................................................................................................ 1
1.2 Guidance versus navigation........................................................................................... 1
1.3 Categories of navigation................................................................................................ 2
1.4 The vehicle ............................................................................................................ 3
1.4.1 Civil aircraft ..................................................................................................... 3
1.4.2 Military aircraft................................................................................................. 5
1.5 Phases of flight ............................................................................................................ 7
1.5.1 Takeoff ............................................................................................................ 7
1.5.2 Terminal area.................................................................................................... 7
1.5.3 En route ............................................................................................................ 7
1.5.4 Approach .......................................................................................................... 8
1.5.5 Landing ............................................................................................................ 8
1.5.6 Missed approach ............................................................................................... 9
1.5.7 Surface ............................................................................................................ 9
1.5.8 Weather ............................................................................................................ 9
1.6 Design trade-offs........................................................................................................... 9
1.7 Evolution of air navigation.......................................................................................... 11
1.8 Integrated avionics...................................................................................................... 15
1.8.1 All aircraft ...................................................................................................... 15
1.8.2 Military avionics ............................................................................................. 16
1.8.3 Architecture .................................................................................................... 17
1.9 Human navigator ........................................................................................................ 19

Chapter 2: The Navigation Equations........................................................................................... 21


Myron Kayton
2.1 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 21
2.2 Geometry of the Earth ................................................................................................. 23
2.3 Coordinate frames....................................................................................................... 26
2.4 Dead-reckoning computations ..................................................................................... 29
2.5 Positioning .......................................................................................................... 32
2.5.1 Radio fixes ...................................................................................................... 32
2.5.2 Line-of-sight distance measurement ................................................................ 33
2.5.3 Ground-wave one-way ranging........................................................................ 35
2.5.4 Ground-wave time-differencing....................................................................... 36

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2.6 Terrain-matching navigation....................................................................................... 37
2.7 Course computation .................................................................................................... 38
2.7.1 Range and bearing calculation......................................................................... 38
2.7.2 Direct steering................................................................................................. 41
2.7.3 Airway steering............................................................................................... 41
2.7.4 Area navigation............................................................................................... 42
2.8 Navigation errors ........................................................................................................ 44
2.8.1 Test data ........................................................................................................ 44
2.8.2 Geometric dilution of precision ....................................................................... 48
2.9 Digital charts .......................................................................................................... 49
2.10 Software development ................................................................................................ 51
2.11 Future trends .......................................................................................................... 52
Problems .......................................................................................................... 52

Chapter 3: Multisensor Navigation Systems.................................................................................... 55


James R. Huddle, R. Grover Brown
3.1 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 55
3.2 Inertial system characteristics...................................................................................... 57
3.3 An integrated stellar-inertial system............................................................................ 61
3.4 Integrated Doppler-inertial systems............................................................................. 64
3.5 An airspeed-damped inertial system ............................................................................ 67
3.6 An integrated stellar-inertial-Doppler system .............................................................. 68
3.7 Position update of an inertial system ........................................................................... 69
3.8 Noninertial GPS multisensor navigation systems......................................................... 69
3.9 Filtering of measurements........................................................................................... 70
3.9.1 Single sensor, stationary vehicle...................................................................... 70
3.9.2 Multiple sensors, stationary vehicle................................................................. 71
3.9.3 Multiple sensors, moving vehicle .................................................................... 72
3.10 Kalman filter basics .................................................................................................... 72
3.10.1 The process and measurement models ............................................................. 73
3.10.2 The error covariance matrix ............................................................................ 75
3.10.3 The recursive filter .......................................................................................... 75
3.11 Open-loop Kalman filter mechanization...................................................................... 77
3.12 Closed-loop Kalman filter mechanization.................................................................... 70
3.13 GPS-INS mechanization ............................................................................................. 81
3.13.1 Linearizing a nonlinear range measurement.................................................... 81
3.13.2 GPS clock error model .................................................................................... 82
3.13.3 11-state GPS/INS linear error model ............................................................... 83
3.13.4 Elaboration of the 11-state GPS/INS error model ............................................ 90
3.14 Practical considerations............................................................................................... 91
3.15 Federated system architecture...................................................................................... 93
3.16 Future trends .......................................................................................................... 96
Problems .......................................................................................................... 96

Chapter 4: Terrestrial Radio-Navigation Systems ............................................................................ 99


Bahar J. Uttam, David H. Amos, Joseph M. Covino, Peter Morris
4.1 Introduction .......................................................................................................... 99
4.2 General principles....................................................................................................... 99
4.2.1 Radio transmission and reception .................................................................... 99
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4.2.2 Propagation and noise characteristics .............................................................104
4.3 System design considerations .....................................................................................111
4.3.1 Radio-navigation system types........................................................................111
4.3.2 System performance parameters .....................................................................114
4.4 Point source systems ..................................................................................................116
4.4.1 Direction-finding ...........................................................................................116
4.4.2 Nondirectional beacons ..................................................................................120
4.4.3 Marker beacons..............................................................................................121
4.4.4 VHF omni directional range (VOR) ...............................................................122
4.4.5 Doppler VOR.................................................................................................126
4.4.6 Distance-measuring equipment (DME) ..........................................................127
4.4.7 Tactical air navigation (Tacan) ......................................................................133
4.5 Hyperbolic systems.....................................................................................................138
4.5.1 Loran .........................................................................................................138
4.5.2 Omega .........................................................................................................155
4.5.3 Decca .........................................................................................................171
4.5.4 Chayka .........................................................................................................173
4.6 Future trends .........................................................................................................175
Problems .........................................................................................................176

Chapter 5: Satellite Radio Navigation.............................................................................................178


A.J. Van Dierendonck
5.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................178
5.1.1 System configuration......................................................................................179
5.2 The basics of satellite radio navigation .......................................................................180
5.2.1 Ranging equations..........................................................................................181
5.2.2 Range-rate (Change-in-range) equations ........................................................183
5.2.3 Clock errors ...................................................................................................184
5.3 Orbital mechanics and clock characteristics ...............................................................184
5.3.1 Orbital mechanics ..........................................................................................184
5.3.2 Clock characteristics ......................................................................................190
5.4 Atmospheric effects on satellite signals ......................................................................192
5.4.1 Ionospheric refraction ....................................................................................192
5.4.2 Tropospheric refraction ..................................................................................195
5.5 NAVSTAR Global Positioning System.......................................................................197
5.5.1 Principles of GPS and system operation..........................................................197
5.5.2 GPS satellite constellation and coverage.........................................................200
5.5.3 Space vehicle configuration............................................................................204
5.5.4 The GPS control segment...............................................................................207
5.5.5 GPS signal structure ......................................................................................213
5.5.6 The GPS navigation message .........................................................................218
5.5.7 GPS measurements and the navigation solution..............................................226
5.5.8 Aviation receiver characteristics.....................................................................229
5.5.9 Differential GPS.............................................................................................248
5.5.10 GPS accuracy .................................................................................................253
5.6 Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS) .........................................257
5.6.1 GLONASS orbits ...........................................................................................257
5.6.2 GLONASS signal structure ............................................................................258
5.6.3 The GLONASS navigation message...............................................................261
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5.6.4 Time and coordinate systems..........................................................................262
2.6.5 GLONASS constellation ................................................................................262
5.7 GNSS integrity and availability..................................................................................262
5.7.1 Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM) ......................................263
5.7.2 Combined GPS/GLONASS ............................................................................267
5.7.3 Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) ....................................................268
5.7.4 Pseudolite augmentation.................................................................................275
5.8 Future trends .........................................................................................................278
Problems .........................................................................................................279

Chapter 6: Terrestrial Integrated Radio Communication Navigation Systems ................................283


Walter R. Fried, James A. Kivett, Edgar Westbrook
6.2 Introduction .........................................................................................................283
6.2.1 General principles..........................................................................................284
6.2.2 JTIDS system characteristics ..........................................................................285
6.2.3 Clock synchronization....................................................................................286
6.2.4 Coordinate frames and community organization.............................................288
6.2.5 Operational utility..........................................................................................290
6.2.6 Mechanization ...............................................................................................290
6.2.7 Error characteristics .......................................................................................297
6.2.8 System accuracy.............................................................................................299
6.3 Position location reporting system ..............................................................................299
6.3.1 General principles..........................................................................................299
6.3.2 System elements.............................................................................................300
6.3.3 Control network structure...............................................................................301
6.3.4 Waveform architecture ...................................................................................302
6.3.5 Measurements ................................................................................................304
6.3.6 Position location and tracking ........................................................................306
6.3.7 Tracking filter................................................................................................307
6.3.8 Network and traffic management ...................................................................308
6.3.9 System capacity and accuracy.........................................................................309
6.3.10 PLRS user equipment characteristics..............................................................310
6.3.11 System enhancements ....................................................................................310
6.4 Future trends .........................................................................................................311
Problems .........................................................................................................312

Chapter 7: Inertial Navigation .............................................................................................................


313
Daniel A. Tazartes, Myron Kayton, John G. Mark
7.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................313
7.2 The system .........................................................................................................314
7.3 Instruments .........................................................................................................317
7.3.1 Accelerometers...............................................................................................317
7.3.2 Gyroscopes.....................................................................................................324
7.3.3 Optical gyroscopes .........................................................................................326
7.3.4 Mechanical gyroscopes...................................................................................342
7.3.5 Future inertial instruments .............................................................................347
7.4 Platforms .........................................................................................................348
7.4.1 Analytic platform (strapdown)........................................................................348
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7.4.2 Gimbaled platform .........................................................................................361
7.4.3 Inertial specifications .....................................................................................364
7.5 Mechanization equations............................................................................................365
7.5.1 Coordinate frames..........................................................................................365
7.5.2 Horizontal mechanization ..............................................................................368
7.5.3 Vertical mechanization ..................................................................................373
7.6 Error analysis .........................................................................................................376
7.6.1 Purpose .........................................................................................................376
7.6.2 Simulation .....................................................................................................376
7.6.3 Error propagation...........................................................................................377
7.6.4 Total system error ..........................................................................................379
7.7 Alignment .........................................................................................................379
7.7.1 Leveling.........................................................................................................382
7.7.2 Gyrocompass alignment .................................................................................384
7.7.3 Transfer alignment.........................................................................................386
7.7.4 Attitude and Heading Reference Systems (AHRS) ..........................................389
7.8 Fundamental limits ....................................................................................................389
7.9 Future trends .........................................................................................................389
Problems .........................................................................................................390

Chapter 8: Air-Data Systems .........................................................................................................393


Stephen S. Osder
8.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................393
8.2 Air-data measurements ..............................................................................................394
8.2.1 Conventional “Intrusive” probes.....................................................................394
8.2.2 Static pressure................................................................................................394
8.2.3 Total pressure ................................................................................................396
8.2.4 Air temperature..............................................................................................398
8.2.5 Angle of attack and angle of sideslip ..............................................................399
8.2.6 Air-data transducers.......................................................................................400
8.3 Air-data equations......................................................................................................402
8.3.1 Altitude .........................................................................................................402
8.3.2 Mach number.................................................................................................405
8.3.3 Calibrated airspeed.........................................................................................406
8.3.4 True airspeed .................................................................................................407
8.3.5 Altitude rate...................................................................................................407
8.4 Air-data systems .............................................................................................................
407
8.4.1 Accuracy requirements...................................................................................407
8.4.2 Air-data computers.........................................................................................409
8.4.3 Architecture trends ........................................................................................412
8.5 Specialty designs........................................................................................................413
8.5.1 Helicopter air-data systems.............................................................................413
8.5.2 Optical air-data systems .................................................................................418
8.5.3 Hypersonic air data ........................................................................................421
8.6 Calibration and system test.........................................................................................422
8.6.1 Ground calibration .........................................................................................422
8.6.2 Flight calibration............................................................................................423
8.6.3 Built-in test (BIT) ..........................................................................................423
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8.7 Future trends .........................................................................................................424
Problems .........................................................................................................424
Chapter 9: Attitude and Heading References
Myron Kayton, Willis G. Wing
9.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................426
9.2 Basic instruments.......................................................................................................427
9.2.1 Gyroscopes.....................................................................................................427
9.2.2 Gravity sensors...............................................................................................428
9.3 Vertical references .....................................................................................................429
9.3.1 The averaging vertical reference.....................................................................431
9.3.2 Rate compensations........................................................................................433
9.3.3 Acceleration corrections.................................................................................434
9.3.4 The magnetic compass needle ........................................................................439
9.4 Heading references.....................................................................................................436
9.4.1 Earth’s magnetic field ....................................................................................437
9.4.2 Aircraft magnetic effects ................................................................................438
9.4.3 The magnetic compass needle ........................................................................439
9.4.4 Magnetometers...............................................................................................440
9.4.5 Electrical swinging ........................................................................................443
9.4.6 The directional gyroscope...............................................................................444
9.5 Initial alignment of heading reference........................................................................446
9.6 Future trends .........................................................................................................446
Problems .........................................................................................................447

Chapter 10: Doppler and Altimeter Radars


Walter R. Fried, Heinz Buell, James R. Hager
10.1 Doppler radars .........................................................................................................449
10.1.1 Functions and applications .............................................................................449
10.1.2 Doppler radar principles and design approaches.............................................451
10.1.3 Signal characteristics .....................................................................................472
10.1.4 Doppler radar errors.......................................................................................477
10.1.5 Equipment configurations ..............................................................................490
10.2 Radar altimeters.........................................................................................................491
10.2.1 Functions and applications .............................................................................491
10.2.2 General principles..........................................................................................492
10.2.3 pulsed radar altimeters ...............................................................................................492
10.2.4 FM-CW radar altimeter..................................................................................493
10.2.5 Phase-coded pulsed radar altimeters ...............................................................497
10.3 Future trends .........................................................................................................498
Problems .........................................................................................................500

Chapter 11: Mapping and Multimode Radars ................................................................................503


Jack O. Pearson, Thomson S. Abbott,, Jr., Robert H. Jeffers
11.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................503
11.2 Radar pilotage .........................................................................................................504
11.3 Semiautomatic position fixing....................................................................................509
11.4 Semiautomatic position fixing with synthetic aperture radars .....................................511
11.4.1 Unfocused systems .........................................................................................514
11.4.2 Focused systems .............................................................................................516
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11.4.3 Motion compensation .....................................................................................518
11.5 Precision velocity update............................................................................................522
11.5.1 Mechanization ...............................................................................................523
11.5.2 PVU measurement errors ...............................................................................525
11.5.3 PVU Kalman filter .........................................................................................527
11.5.4 PVU mode observability concerns ..................................................................529
11.6 Terrain following and avoidance............................................................................................529
11.6.1 Radar mode and scan pattern implementation ................................................532
11.6.2 Terrain measurement .....................................................................................534
11.6.3 Aircraft control ..............................................................................................536
11.7 Multimode radars.......................................................................................................538
11.8 Signal processing .......................................................................................................539
11.9 Airborne weather radar ..............................................................................................540
11.9.1 Radar reflectivity of weather formations .........................................................542
11.9.2 Weather radar processing...............................................................................543
11.9.3 Radar detection of microburst and wind shear ................................................544
11.10 Future trends .........................................................................................................545
11.10.1 Electronic scanned arrays .............................................................................546
11.10.2 Radar processing ..........................................................................................547
11.10.3 Radar receiver/exciter function .....................................................................548
11.10.4 Interfaces and packaging .............................................................................549
11.10.5 Displays .......................................................................................................549
Problems .........................................................................................................549

Chapter 12: Celestial Navigation ....................................................................................................551


Edward J. Knobbe, Gerald N. Haas
12.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................551
12.1.1 Evolution of celestial navigation.....................................................................551
12.1.2 General system description.............................................................................552
12.2. Star observation geometry..........................................................................................553
12.3 Theory of stellar-inertial navigation ...........................................................................557
12.3.1 Modeling and Kalman filtering ......................................................................558
12.3.2 Information and observability.........................................................................562
12.4 Stellar sensor design characteristics ...........................................................................564
12.4.1 Telescope parameters .....................................................................................564
12.4.2 Star-signal power ...........................................................................................567
12.4.3 Sky background power ...................................................................................568
12.4.4 Star-light detection.........................................................................................572
12.4.5 Focal plane array processing .........................................................................573
12.5 Celestial navigation system design .............................................................................575
12.5.1 Time reference ...............................................................................................575
12.5.2 Star observation and pointing errors...............................................................576
12.5.3 Stabilized platform configuration ...................................................................578
12.5.4 Strapdown IMU configurations ......................................................................581
12.6 Star catalog characteristics.........................................................................................583
12.6.1 Star catalog contents ......................................................................................584
12.6.2 Star catalog size .............................................................................................584
12.6.3 Planet and moon avoidance ............................................................................586
12.6.4 Star position corrections.................................................................................586
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12.7 System calibration and alignment...............................................................................590
12.7.1 Factory calibration .........................................................................................590
12.7.2 Pre-flight and in-flight calibration and alignment...........................................592
12.8 Future trends .........................................................................................................594
Problems .........................................................................................................594

Chapter 13: Landing Systems ................................................................................................... .....597


D.B. Vickers, Richard H. McFarland, William M. Waters, Myron Kayton
13.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................597
13.2 Low-visibility operations............................................................................................597
13.3 The mechanics of the landing.....................................................................................600
13.3.1 The approach .................................................................................................600
13.3.2 The flare maneuver ........................................................................................603
13.3.3 The decrab maneuver and touchdown.............................................................603
13.3.4 Rollout and taxi..............................................................................................604
13.4 Automatic Landing Systems.......................................................................................605
13.4.1 Guidance and control requirements ................................................................606
13.4.2 Flare guidance................................................................................................606
13.4.3 Lateral guidance.............................................................................................607
13.5 The Instrument Landing System ................................................................................608
13.5.1 ILS guidance signals ......................................................................................608
13.5.2 The localizer ..................................................................................................613
13.5.3 The glide slope...............................................................................................614
13.5.4 ILS marker beacons........................................................................................618
13.5.5 Receivers........................................................................................................618
13.5.6 ILS limitations ...............................................................................................619
13.6 The Microwave Landing System ................................................................................620
13.6.1 Signal format .................................................................................................621
13.6.2 The angle functions........................................................................................621
13.6.3 Data functions................................................................................................625
13.6.4 Aircraft antennas and receivers ......................................................................626
13.6.5 Mobile MLS...................................................................................................627
13.6.6 Precision DME (DME/P) ...............................................................................627
13.7 Satellite landing systems ............................................................................................628
13.7.1 Augmentation concepts ..................................................................................628
13.7.2 Position solutions ...........................................................................................629
13.7.3 Research issues ..............................................................................................630
13.8 Carrier-landing systems .............................................................................................630
13.8.1 Description of the problem .............................................................................630
13.8.2 Optical landing aids .......................................................................................633
13.8.3 Electronic landing aids...................................................................................634
13.9 Future trends .........................................................................................................636
13.9.1 Pilot aids........................................................................................................636
13.9.2 Satellite landing aids......................................................................................638
13.9.3 Airport surface navigation..............................................................................638
13.9.4 Carrier landing ..............................................................................................638
Problems .........................................................................................................638

Chapter 14: Air Traffic Management


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Clyde A. Miller, John A. Scardina ..................................................................................................642
14.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................642
14.1.1 Services provided to aircraft operations ......................................................................642
14.1.2 Government responsibilities ...........................................................................643
14.2 Flight rules and airspace organization ........................................................................643
14.2.1 Visual and instrument flight rules ..................................................................643
14.2.2 Altimetry .......................................................................................................644
14.2.3 Controlled airspace ........................................................................................645
14.2.4 Uncontrolled airspace.....................................................................................645
14.2.5 Special use airspace........................................................................................646
14.3 Airways and procedures ............................................................................................646
14.3.1 Victor airways and jet routes ..........................................................................646
14.3.2 Random routes ...............................................................................................649
14.3.3 Separation standards ......................................................................................649
14.3.4 Terminal instrument procedures.....................................................................651
14.3.4 Standard instrument departures and arrivals...................................................655
14.4. Phases of flight .........................................................................................................655
14.4.1 Pre-flight planning.........................................................................................656
14.4.2 Departure.......................................................................................................657
14.4.3 En route ........................................................................................................658
14.4.4 Approach and landing....................................................................................659
14.4.5 Oceanic .........................................................................................................660
14.5 Subsystems .........................................................................................................661
14.5.1 Navigation .....................................................................................................661
14.5.2 Radar surveillance..........................................................................................664
14.5.3 Automatic dependent surveillance ..................................................................667
14.5.4 Air-to-ground data ink communications .........................................................669
14.5.5 Aviation weather............................................................................................672
14.5.6 Automation and display subsystem .................................................................673
14.5.7 Airborne ATM subsystems .............................................................................675
14.6 Facilities and operations.............................................................................................677
14.6.1 National traffic management ..........................................................................677
14.6.2 En-route facilities...........................................................................................677
14.6.3 Terminal facilities..........................................................................................797
14.6.4 Airport facilities.............................................................................................697
14.6.5 Flight service facilities ...................................................................................680
14.6.6 Oceanic facilities............................................................................................680
14.7 System capacity .........................................................................................................681
14.7.1 Reducing peak demand ..................................................................................681
14.7.2 Increasing system capacity .............................................................................682
14.8 Airborne collision avoidance systems .........................................................................684
14.9 Future trends .........................................................................................................686
Problems .........................................................................................................689

Chapter 15: Avionics Interfaces.....................................................................................................691


Cary R. Spitzer
15.1 Introduction .........................................................................................................691
15.2 Data buses .........................................................................................................691
15.3 Crew displays .........................................................................................................694
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15.4 Power .........................................................................................................700
15.5 Maintenance .........................................................................................................700
15.6 Physical interface .......................................................................................................701
15.7 Future trends .........................................................................................................703
Problems .........................................................................................................704

References .........................................................................................................705
Index .........................................................................................................741

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