XASE18-Navigation System
XASE18-Navigation System
Direction of travel
Distance of travel
Aircraft speed
With this information flight planning can commence and the proper method of navigation can be
put to use.
NAVIGATIONAL AIDS
Aids to Navigation Visual Aids Lighthouses
Off Shore Fixed Lights
Light Staffs
Lighted Buoys
Projectors
Leading Lights
Sector Lights
Loran C
Radio Aids Differential GPS
Radio Beacon(MF, Micro Wave)
The 180° ambiguity in this indication is resolved by the provision of a “to/from” of the VOR indicator in
the aircraft avionics. Types: Terminal (terminal area- Near) & En-route (Route fixes, within low or high
airspace)
Automatic Direction Finder (ADF)
ADF (Automatic Direction Finder) is the radio signals in the low to medium frequency
band of 190 Khz. to 1750 Khz.
It was widely used today. It has the major advantage over VOR navigation in the
reception is not limited to line of sight distance.
The ADF signals follow the curvature of the earth.
The maximum of distance is depend on the power of the beacon.
The ADF can receives on both AM radio station and NDB (Non-Directional Beacon).
Commercial AM radio stations broadcast on 540 to 1620 Khz. Non-Directional Beacon
operate in the frequency band of 190 to 535 Khz.
ADF COMPONENTS
ADF Receiver : Pilot can tune the station desired and to select the mode of operation. The
signal is received, amplified, and converted to audible voice or morse code transmission and
powers the bearing indicator.
Control Box (Digital Readout Type) : Most modern aircraft has this type of control in the
cockpit . In this equipment the frequency tuned is displayed as digital readout. ADF
automatically determines bearing to selected station and it on the RMI.
Antenna : The aircraft consist of two antennas. The two antennas are called LOOP antenna
and SENSE antenna. The ADF receives signals on both loop and sense antennas. The loop
antenna in common use today is a small flat antenna without moving parts. Within the antenna
are several coils spaced at various angles. The loop antenna sense the direction of the station
by the strength of the signal on each coil but cannot determine whether the bearing is TO or
FROM the station. The sense antenna provides this latter information.
Bearing Indicator : Displays the bearing to station relative to the nose of the aircraft.
Relative Bearing is the angle formed by the line drawn through the center line of the aircraft
and a line drawn from the aircraft to the radio station.
Magnetic Bearing is the angle formed by a line drawn from aircraft to the radio station and a
line drawn from the aircraft to magnetic north (Bearing to station).
Magnetic Bearing = Magnetic Heading + Relative Bearing
Types of ADF indicator: Fixed compass, Rotatable compass, Single needle, Double needle
ILS (Instrument Landing System)
An electronic system that provides both horizontal and vertical guidance to a
specific runway, used to execute a precision instrument approach procedure.
The ILS system provides both course and altitude guidance to a specific runway.
Installed on each end of a runway.
It was a accepted as a standard system by the ICAO, in1947.
Uses radio signals and sometimes coupled with high- intensity lights.
Enable a safe landing during instrument meteorological conditions
Above On Below
glidepath glidepath glidepath
MARKER BEACON
Two VHF marker beacons, outer and middle, are normally used in the ILS system.
A third beacon, the inner, is used where Category II operations are certified.
A marker beacon may also be installed to indicate the FAF on the ILS back course.
The OM is located on the localizer front course 4 to 7 miles from the airport to
indicate a position at which an aircraft, at the appropriate altitude on the localizer
course, will intercept the glide path.
The MM is located approximately 3,500 feet from the landing threshold on the
centerline of the localizer front course at a position where the glide-slope
centerline is about 200 feet above the touchdown zone elevation.
The inner marker (IM), where installed, is located on the front course between the
MM and the landing threshold. It indicates the point at which an aircraft is at the
decision height on the glide path during a Category II ILS approach.
Marker Beacon (IMAGE)
COMPASS LOCATOR & Approach Lights
COMPASS LOCATOR:
Compass locators are low-powered NDBs and are received and indicated by the ADF
receiver.
When used in conjunction with an ILS front course, the compass locator facilities are
collocated with the outer and/or MM facilities.
The coding identification of the outer locator consists of the first two letters of the three-
letter identifier of the associated LOC.
For example, the outer locator at Dallas/Love Field (DAL) is identified as “DA.”
The middle locator at DAL is identified by the last two letters “AL.”
APPROACH LIGHTS:
Normal approach and letdown on the ILS is divided into two distinct stages: the instrument
approach stage using only radio guidance, and the visual stage, when visual contact with the
ground runway environment is necessary for accuracy and safety.
The ALS provides lights that will penetrate the atmosphere far enough from touchdown to
give directional, distance, and glide path information for safe visual transition.
Runway Lighting
ILS Categories
There are several categories of ILS, each pertaining to how low the visibility
can be in order for the aircraft to land safely.
The categories are based on ceiling and visibility at the airport when the
airplane arrives.
Decision Height (DH) Runway Visual Range (RVR)
Category I is a DH of 200 feet and an RVR of 2400 feet.
Category II is a DH of 100 feet and an RVR of 1200 feet
Category IIIa is a DH of 100 feet and an RVR of 700 feet.
Category IIIb is a DH of 100 feet and an RVR of 150 feet.
Category IIIc is “0/0”, no visibility, and currently there are no Cat IIIc
airports in the US.
The airplane must be equipped and maintained for the various categories and
the pilots must also be trained and qualified to land in low visibility conditions.
ILS Limitations
It only has 40 channels.
It only can serve one runway, causing congestion in bad weather.
Ground-controlled approach is the oldest air traffic technique to fully implement radar
to service a plane.
The system was simple, direct, and worked well, even with previously untrained
pilots.
The controllers are provide verbal instructions by radio to the pilots to guide
them to a landing.
The instructions include both descent rate (glide path) and heading (course)
corrections necessary to follow the correct approach path.
Two tracks are displayed on the Precision Approach Radar (PAR) scope:
Azimuth, showing the aircraft's position relative to the horizontal approach
path.
Elevation, showing vertical position relative to the published glide path.
Decision Height - (usually 100–400 ft above the runway touchdown zone)
Example (IMAGES)
DISTANCE MEASURING EQUIPMENT (DME)
DME is a measuring device using ground and air components to determine the slant
range of an aircraft from a point.
FUNCTIONS OF DME:
Paired pulses at specific spacing (interrogation) are sent to a ground station from the
aircraft via the antenna
The ground station (transponder) sends the same pulses back to the aircraft at a
different frequency
Distance is measured in slant range (not horizontal range)
Slant range error minimized at lower altitudes
Operates on the line-of-site principle
Reliable up to 199 NM accuracy of better than 1/2 mile or 3% of the distance,
whichever is greater (more accurate)
Due to the limited number of available frequencies, assignment of paired frequencies is
required for certain military non-collocated VOR and TACAN facilities which serve the
same area but which may be separated by distances up to a few miles
Can be identified every 30 seconds
CONTINUE…
Required above FL 240 when VOR navigation required (under IFR) as per FAR 91.205(e)
GS values, if displayed, are only accurate when flying directly to / from the station
960 MHz to 1215 MHz in accordance with ICAO Annex 10
DME is required for aircraft operating at or above 24,000 feet.
TACAN
TACAN (TACtical Air Navigation System) is a fixed navigation system primarily used
by military, not civilian aircraft.
The TACAN periodically transmits its identification call sign in Morse code to enable
aircraft to determine which ground station they are using.
Distance reply signals are transmitted upon request. TACAN receives an interrogation
code from an aircraft, delays it and retransmits the same code back to the aircraft.
CONTINUE…
The time, measured in microseconds, it takes for the code to reach the aircraft determines
the distance from the ground station.
Approximately 100 aircraft can interrogate the TACAN at any given moment.
The usable distance of the TACAN is usually 40 nautical miles (NM), but it can be
received up to 200 NM (Line-of-Sight) away.
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF TACAN
ADVANTAGES:
This system rejects bounced signals.
It has low power consumption.
It is resistant to the shock, vibration and EMI.
It is flawless in the areas having severest sites such as snow, humidity, rain, fungus, sand and dust
regions.
It has no moving parts and hence antennas do not require any maintenance.
It combines both bearing and distance capabilities together.
DISADVANTAGES:
Bearing error is about +/- 3.5 Degreee.
The system has distance slant error
TACAN system is limited to LOS due to UHF band of operation.
It is a stable military navigational aid and will remain in operation for long time.
In spite of GPS more accurate than TACAN.
Doppler Navigations System
Doppler navigation systems represent a great advance over earlier types of
aircraft navigation equipment.
DNS is the self-contained radar system that utilizes the Doppler effect (Doppler
radar) for measuring the ground speed and drift angle of flying apparatus and
accomplishes its dead-reckoning navigation.
The internationally authorized frequency band of 13.25 to 13.4 GHz has been
allocated for airborne Doppler navigation radar.
Continue…
It does this by bouncing a microwave signal off a desired target and analyzing
how the object's motion has altered the frequency of the returned signal.
The system can be used for long distance navigation over oceans and
underdeveloped areas of the globe
Doppler navigation sensors are often integrated with over a/c navigations
systems
DOPPLER EFFECT
Doppler Effect:
His hypothesis was that the frequency of a wave apparently changes as its
source moves closer to, or further away from an observer
User Segment
Control Segment
Space Segment
SMALL HISTORY OF GPS
The GPS project was developed in the year of 1973.
The Global Positioning System, formally known as the Navstar Global Positioning
System, was initiated as a joint civil/military technical program in 1973.
GPS was invented by two American engineers Ivan Alexander, Bradford Parkinson and an
American Scientist Roger L. Easton with the co-operation of US Department of Défense
(DoD).
By creating a system that overcame the limitations of many existing navigation systems,
GPS became attractive to a broad spectrum of users worldwide.
The Global Positioning System has been successful in virtually all navigation and timing
applications, and because its capabilities are accessible using small, inexpensive
equipment, GPS is being used in a wide variety of applications across the globe.
How the system works?
Space Segment
24+ Satellites
The Current
Ephemeris is
Transmitted to
Users
GPS Control
User Segment & SPACE SEGMENT
USER SEGMENT:
Dual Use System Since 1985 (civil & military)
Civilian community was quick to take advantage of the system
1. Hundreds of receivers on the market
2. 3 billion in sales, double in 2 years
3. 95% of current users
DoD/DoT Executive Board sets GPS policy
SPACE SEGMENT:
1. 24+ satellites
a) 6 planes with 55° inclination
b) Each plane has 4-5 satellites
c) Broadcasting position and time info on 2 frequencies
d) Constellation has spares
e) Operating on Solar Energy
f) Radio signal
g) Signals travels at speed of light 3*10^8 m/sec.
CONTINUE…
2. Very high orbit
1) 20,200 km
2) 1 revolution in approximately 12 hrs.
3) Travel approx. 7,000mph
4) Two revolution around earth in one day
3. Considerations
1) Accuracy
2) Survivability
3) Coverage
Control Segment
Colorado
Springs
Ascension Kwajalein
Hawaii
Islands
Diego
Garcia
Clock Error
Differences between satellite clock
and receiver clock
Ionosphere Delays
Delay of GPS signals as they pass
through the layer of charged ions
and free electrons known as the
ionosphere.
Multipath Error
Caused by local reflections of the
GPS signal that mix with the desired
signal
60
Common Uses for GPS
Surveying/ Mapping
Military Applications
Recreational Uses
61
Traffic Alert and Collision Avoidance System (TCAS)
The Traffic Alert and Collision Avoidance System (TCAS), also known as the Airborne
Collision Avoidance System (ACAS) is an airborne system designed to increase cockpit
awareness of nearby aircraft and service as a last defense against mid-air collisions.
The system monitors airspace around an aircraft for other transponder equipped aircraft that
may present a collision threat.
Aircraft with Mode C transponders will respond to interrogations with altitude information
Aircraft with Mode S transponders will respond to interrogations with address information
If another aircraft is within range, it will respond to the interrogation, the first aircraft will
measure the time difference to compute the range of the other aircraft.
If n pulse are integrated, the SNR of If n pulse are integrated, the SNR of
integrated signal is SNR. integrated signal is lesser than SNR.
Pounds for the fuel quantity on the aircraft (read by the fuel gauges)
25. RMI
For example, if an aircraft is flown from a high pressure area to a low pressure area
without adjusting the altimeter, a constant altitude will be displayed, but the actual height
of the aircraft above the ground would be lower then the indicated altitude.
Magnetic Compass
The magnetic compass was one of the first flight instruments developed.
A compass is simple instrument containing a freely suspended magnetic
element.
A compass is a simple magnetic bar suspended in fluid
It floats in a hardened steel pivot in its center that rides inside a special
spring-loaded hard glass jewel cup
The magnetic compass is a reliable, self-contained unit requiring no external
power source.
It is extremely useful as a standby or emergency instrument
A graduated scale called a card is wrapped around the float and viewed
through a glass window with a lubber line across it
The card is marked with letters representing the cardinal directions, north,
east, south, and west, and a number for each 30° between these letters
-There are long and short graduation marks between the letters and numbers,
with each long mark representing 10° and each short mark representing 5°
Continue…
Magnetism:
The Earth is a huge magnet with lines of flux which make its magnetic field
These lines extend from the poles around the Earth
Characteristics:
Any magnet that is free to rotate (such as an aircraft's magnetic compass) will
align with them
An electrical current is induced into any conductor that cuts across them
A magnet, typically made of iron, attracts and holds lines of flux
Magnets have a north and a south pole
Opposite poles attract, while similar poles repel
Continue…
Magnetic Compass Construction
The float and card assembly has a hardened steel pivot in its center that rides
inside a special, spring-loaded, hard-glass jewel cup
An aircraft magnetic compass has two small magnets attached to a metal float
sealed inside a bowl of clear compass fluid.
The compass housing is entirely full of compass fluid, similar to kerosene, to
avoid freezing at lower temperatures/higher altitudes
The buoyancy of the float takes most of the weight off the pivot, and the fluid
damps the oscillation of the float and card
This jewel-and-pivot type mounting allows the float freedom to rotate and tilt up
to approximately 18° angle of bank
At steeper bank angles, the compass indications are erratic and unpredictable
To prevent damage or leakage when the fluid expands and contracts with
temperature changes, the rear of the compass case is sealed with a flexible
diaphragm or with a metal bellows in some compasses
Operations
The magnets align with the Earth's magnetic field and the pilot reads the
direction on the scale opposite the lubber line
When the pilot is flying north as the compass shows, east is to the pilot's right,
but on the card "33", which represents 330° (west of north), is to the right of
north
The reason for this apparent backward graduation is that the card remains
stationary, and the compass housing and the pilot turn around it, always viewing
the card from its backside
A compensator assembly mounted on the top or bottom of the compass allows
an aviation maintenance technician (AMT) to create a magnetic field inside the
compass housing that cancels the influence of local outside magnetic fields
This is done to correct for deviation error
The compensator assembly has two shafts whose ends have screwdriver slots
accessible from the front of the compass
Each shaft rotates one or two small compensating magnets
The end of one shaft is marked E-W and its magnets affect the compass when
the aircraft is pointed east or west
The other shaft is marked N-S and its magnets affect the compass when the
aircraft is pointed north or south
Compass Errors
The magnetic compass is the simplest instrument in the panel, but it is
subject to a number of errors that must be considered
These errors can be remembered with the acronym "VD-MONA"
Variation
Deviation
Magnetic Dip
Oscillation
Northerly Turning Error (part of magnetic dip)
Acceleration/Deceleration Errors (part of magnetic dip)
Flux gate Compass System
The basic fluxgate compass is a simple electromagnetic device that employs
two or more small coils of wire around a core of highly permeable magnetic
material, to directly sense the direction of the horizontal component of
the Earth's magnetic field.
The advantages of this mechanism over a magnetic compass are that the
reading is in electronic form and can be digitized and transmitted easily,
displayed remotely, and used by an electronic autopilot for course correction.
A fluxgate compass is a very important and unique tool in marine/Aircraft
navigation as it does not operate automatically like other magnetic compasses.
Technically a fluxgate compass is an electromagnetic compass which solves
the purpose of a conventional compass.
The fluxgate compass is used in ships/Aircraft mainly for the purpose of
steering.
The difference between a magnetic compass and an electronic compass is that
in the former variety there is a pointer that constantly moves indicating the
direction.
Continue…
An electronic compass there are no pointers that specify the direction.
Electric currents that pass through coils of wire that are kept inside the
compass indicate the geographic direction through signals that are displayed
digitally.
Construction:
There are two coils of wire that are located perpendicular to each other around
a permeable magnetic material. When electric current is passed through the
coils the core material works an electromagnet and senses the direction of the
horizontal component of the earth’s magnetic field. This completely eradicates
the problem caused due to the interference of the magnetic north is completely
avoided.
Turn and Bank Indicator
Turn and Bank indicator, aircraft instrument containing one indicator to show
turning, or rotation about the vertical axis, and another to show banking, or
rotation about the longitudinal axis.
The two indicators are essentially separate instruments, but they are
customarily placed together.
The bank indicator is the simpler of the two and consists of a curved glass
tube filled with a damping liquid in which a small steel ball rolls.
When the craft is horizontal, the ball is located in the lowest part of the tube;
as the craft banks, gravity holds the ball at the lowest point as the tube rotates
from side to side.
The tube can be calibrated to show the angle of banking.
The turn indicator contains a gyroscope that develops a torque when the craft
rotates.
This torque controls a pointer that indicates to the pilot in degrees per unit of
time the rate at which the craft is turning.
DIAGRAM
Directional Gyro
Directional gyroscope known as directional gyro
The equipment directional gyro is used to determine direction of aircraft.
This helps pilot in navigation to fly aircraft above the earth safely.
It is also known as heading indicator.
It is sometimes referred to by its older names, the directional gyro or DG, and also direction
indicator or DI.
It looks like compass but it does not operate based on magnetic field of the earth.
Hence it is more accurate compare to compass.
The gyroscopic heading indicator is unaffected by dip and acceleration errors.
DG’s are used because they are not effected by magnetic disturbances
The heading indicator has no direction-seeking qualities of its own, it must be set to agree with the
magnetic compass