• DocumentCode
    2024766
  • Title

    Transmission of differential GPS signals over fiber for aircraft attitude determination

  • Author

    Pessoa, M. ; Oliveira, J.M.B. ; Coelho, D. ; Castro, J.C.S. ; Salgado, H.M. ; Farries, Mark

  • Author_Institution
    INESC TEC, Porto, Portugal
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    11-13 Sept. 2012
  • Firstpage
    80
  • Lastpage
    81
  • Abstract
    The Daphne project has been addressing the adoption of an optical fiber infrastructure for future aircrafts. Beyond the obvious motivation of reduced weight and electromagnetic interference, the availability of a huge amount of bandwidth makes the optical fiber well suited to transport Radio Frequency (RF) signals transparently, while avoiding cumbersome dedicated RF cabling. An integrated optical network may be exploited to transport radio signals from diverse aircraft antennas ranging from satellite/earth communications, collision avoidance, GPS signals for positioning and attitude determination, weather/detection RADAR to corrosion sensors. Such network can also support passenger infotainment and mobile communication services, such as cellular GSM/UMTS/LTE, broadband Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11) and Ultra-Wide-Band Wimedia/WiGig. Specifically, the optical fiber infrastructure may provide connectivity from external antennas (through remote nodes) to RF transceivers installed in the cockpit and avionics bay (head-end nodes); in the context of the present paper, the transmission of differential GPS signals used to provide aircraft attitude information will be discussed. The use of GPS for aircraft attitude determination has been under discussion for more than 20 years [1]. It consists in performing carrier-phase differential processing of measurements from GPS antennas affixed to the frame of the aircraft, which yields centimeter- or millimeter-level accuracies, provided that integer phase ambiguities are resolved [2]. The attitude algorithm consists in a highly accurate real time kinematic (RTK) technique, given the short baseline distance between antennas, in which the main antenna acts as a Base station and two auxiliary antennas as Rovers. In the present experiment, we used a setup consisting of two-antennas (Base and Rover), which is enough to evaluate the RTK performance. A particular aspect of concern stems from the fact that the transmission of optical signals throu- h a complex optical fiber network is subject to the occurrence of reflections in the multitude of connectors spanning the path between a remote node and a head-end node. Therefore, we will focus our analysis on the performance impact of optical reflections affecting the power level stability of the optical source.
  • Keywords
    Global Positioning System; aircraft communication; electromagnetic interference; radar antennas; Daphne project; RF signals; RTK technique; aircraft attitude determination; auxiliary antennas; collision avoidance; differential GPS signals over fiber; electromagnetic interference; optical fiber infrastructure; radar; radio frequency signals; real time kinematic technique; rovers; satellite/earth communications; signal transmission; Adaptive optics; Global Positioning System; Optical attenuators; Optical feedback; Optical fibers; Optical receivers; Optical reflection;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Avionics, Fiber- Optics and Photonics Technology Conference (AVFOP), 2012 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Cocoa Beach, FL
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-0757-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AVFOP.2012.6344032
  • Filename
    6344032