Transcript Document

‫سیستمهای کمک ناوبری‬
‫برای متخصصان اویونیک‬
‫ناوبری کارائی محور‬
‫یک تقسیم بندی ناوبری‬
‫ناوبری‬
‫در مرحله‬
‫فرود‬
‫در مرحله‬
‫تقرب‬
‫در مسیرهای‬
‫هوائی‬
‫یک تقسیم بندی دیگر ناوبری‬
‫ناوبری‬
‫سنتی‬
‫کارائی محور‬
‫یک تقسیم بندی دیگر ناوبری‬
‫ناوبری‬
‫مستقل‬
‫وابسته‬
‫یک تقسیم بندی ناوبری وابسته‬
‫ناوبری وابسته‬
‫مبتنی بر منابع زمینی‬
‫مبتنی بر منابع‬
‫فضائی‬
PBN ‫نگاهی دوباره به تعریف‬
• Performance-based navigation (PBN).
– Area navigation based on performance
requirements for aircraft operating along an ATS
route, on an instrument approach procedure or in
a designated airspace.
• Note.— Performance requirements are expressed in navigation
specifications (RNAV specification, RNP specification) in terms of
accuracy, integrity, continuity, availability and functionality
needed for the proposed operation in the context of a particular
airspace concept.
GNSS augmentation
• Ground Based Augmentation System (GBAS), Satellite Based
Augmentation System (SBAS),
• Aircraft Based Augmentation Systems (ABAS)
• Ground Based Regional Augmentation System (GRAS)
to meet navigation requirements
APV
• Two types of approach and landing operations
with vertical guidance (APV), APV-I and APV-II,
use vertical guidance relative to a glide path,
but the facility or navigation system may not
satisfy all of the requirements associated with
precision approach.
APV
• Approach with Vertical guidance (APV)
• Will enhance safety and efficiency by
providing guided and stabilized vertical
guidance on approach procedures where
currently no guidance exists
APV
• GBAS, SBAS and GRAS are planned to provide (APV) performance levels
that are similar to that of CAT I ILS (200 – 250 ft decision height).
• Currently GBAS is the only GNSS system that potentially will provide CAT II
and CAT III performance levels.
• ABAS currently enable minima’s in the region of 350 feet (above ground).
However, it is not unreasonable, based on current operational trials,
technical analysis and the planned future operation of multiple
constellations, to expect that this capability may be enhanced in the
future to enable ABAS performance levels near to that of CAT I ILS.
APV- I & APV-II performance
Performance Requirement
APV-I
APV-II
Horizontal Accuracy (95%)
220 m
16 m
Vertical Accuracy (95%)
20 m
8m
Integrity
1 − 2 × 10−7 / Approach 1 − 2 × 10−7 /
Approach
Continuity
1 − 8 × 10−6 /15 s
1 − 8 × 10−6 /15 s
Horizontal Alert Limit (HAL)
0.3 nmi
40 m
Vertical Alert Limit (VAL)
50 m
20 m
Availability
99%- 99.999%
99%- 99.999%
Time To Alert (TTA)
10 sec
6 sec
Approaches with lateral and vertical guidance
• APV can be provided in two ways. Either Barometric Vertical
Navigation (Baro VNAV) where the FMS generates a
continuous descent path using barometric altimeter
information or geometric vertical guidance provided by an
augmented Satellite based signal.
• Modern air carrier airplanes have FMS vertical navigation
(VNAV) modes. When this capability is combined with FMS
lateral navigation (LNAV) mode, a three-dimensional approach
path to the runway can be defined and flown.
APV/Baro VNAV
• APV/Baro VNAV (using ABAS) is the most cost
effective and quickest way of implementing APV as
most of today’s civil transport aircraft have
navigation equipment on board that is able to
support this type of approach. APV/Baro VNAV
generally enables approach minima’s lower than
those for NPAs.
RAIM
• ABAS are self contained on board the aircraft and rely upon avionics
processing techniques or avionics integration.
• Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM) provides integrity
monitoring of GPS for aviation applications.
• In order for a GPS receiver to perform RAIM a minimum of 5 visible
satellites with satisfactory geometry must be visible to it.
• The RAIM function performs consistency checks between position
solutions obtained with various subsets of the visible satellites.
• The receiver provides an alert to the pilot if the consistency checks fail.
Because of geometry and planned maintenance RAIM is not always
available. In this situation pre warning is given to users of ‘RAIM outage’.
Aircraft Autonomous Integrity Monitoring
• With Aircraft Autonomous Integrity Monitoring
(AAIM), the integrity of the GPS solution is validated
using other on board information sources, such as
the Inertial Platform, in addition to those used in
RAIM.
– AAIM/ Baro using the barometric altimeter information;
– AAIM/ MS using Multi-Sensor information based on
ground navaids signals (VORs, DMEs, ILS/LOCs);
– AAIM/ INS using the inertial sensor information.
WAAS (as an example)
• The Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) is an air
navigation aid developed by the Federal Aviation
Administration to augment the Global Positioning
System (GPS),
• with the goal of improving its accuracy, integrity, and
availability.
• Essentially, WAAS is intended to enable aircraft to rely on GPS
for all phases of flight, including precision approaches to any
airport within its coverage area.
‫برخی تعاریف‬
• Channel of standard accuracy (CSA). The specified
level of positioning, velocity and timing accuracy that
is available to any GLONASS user on a continuous,
worldwide basis.
• Standard positioning service (SPS). The specified
level of positioning, velocity and timing accuracy that
is available to any global positioning system (GPS)
user on a continuous, worldwide basis.
WAAS Accuracy
• The WAAS specification requires it to provide a position accuracy of 7.6
metres (25 ft) or better (for both lateral and vertical measurements), at
least 95% of the time
• Actual performance measurements of the system at specific locations
have shown it typically provides better than 1.0 metre (3 ft 3 in) laterally
and 1.5 meteres (4 ft 11 in) vertically throughout most of the United
States and large parts of Canada and Alaska
• With these results, WAAS is capable of achieving the required Category I
precision approach accuracy of 16 metres (52 ft) laterally and 4.0 metres
(13.1 ft) vertically.
WAAS Integrity
• Integrity of a navigation system includes the ability to provide timely
warnings when its signal is providing misleading data that could
potentially create hazards.
• The WAAS specification requires the system detect errors in the GPS or
WAAS network and notify users within 6.2 seconds. Certifying that WAAS
is safe for instrument flight rules (IFR) requires proving there is only an
extremely small probability that an error exceeding the requirements for
accuracy will go undetected.
• Specifically, the probability is stated as 1×10−7, and is equivalent to no
more than 3 seconds of bad data per year. This provides integrity
information equivalent to or better than Receiver Autonomous Integrity
Monitoring (RAIM).
WAAS Availability
• Availability is the probability that a navigation system
meets the accuracy and integrity requirements.
Before the advent of WAAS, GPS could be unavailable
for up to a total time of four days per year
• The WAAS specification mandates availability as
99.999% (five nines) throughout the service area,
equivalent to a downtime of just over 5 minutes per
year.
‫در خصوص سامانه های سنتی‬
‫•‬
‫•‬
‫•‬
‫•‬
‫سامانه های سنتی نیز دارای خطا هستند‪.‬‬
‫خطای سامانه های سنتی عموما ثابت است و در زمان تغییر نمی‬
‫کند‪.‬‬
‫سامانه های سنتی دارای سیستم مانیتورینگ هستند که در صورتی‬
‫که خطا از حد مجاز برای کاربرد مورد نظر کمتر شود سامانه را از‬
‫سرویس خارج می کنند‪.‬‬
‫خطای سامانه سنتی ‪ VOR‬در صورتی که برای ناوبری نامناسب‬
‫باشد در ‪ AIP‬درج می شود‪.‬‬
‫پایان قسمت نهم‬
‫سوال؟!‬
‫توضیح؟!‬