Author_Institution :
Nielson Consultants, Monument, CO, USA
Abstract :
The conventional air launched cruise missile (CALCM) was developed from the strategic ALCM, AGM-86, by integrating GPS navigation into the missile in place of terrain correlation (TERCOM). In addition, the nuclear warhead was replaced by conventional explosives. The CALCM was developed, tested, and fielded in a single year (mid 1986-mid 1987) by the Boeing Company where the author was then employed. Although the GPS technology used, a Rockwell single channel aided receiver, has been eclipsed by newer additional capabilities technology, many innovative things were done in completing the CALCM integration: the external loading of almanac data along with other mission data, three satellite navigation capability, and the use of a single channel receiver in a dynamic flight environment. This effort demonstrated that GPS outputs can be integrated quickly into an existing weapon system using the traditional loosely coupled “cascaded filter” approach. Although this approach is not as ideal as a tightly coupled integration using raw GPS data, the use of cascaded filters resulted in a weapon that was able to be rapidly fielded. The Air Force had sufficient confidence in the missile, that after four years of operational testing, 35 of these missiles were targeted at key sites at the start of the Gulf War in 1991. This effort, which was declassified in 1992, resulted in the first weapon in the DOD inventory to be operational using GPS navigation. The effort deserves consideration as a model as to how GPS integration can be performed
Keywords :
aerospace testing; filtering and prediction theory; inertial navigation; missiles; radionavigation; satellite relay systems; GPS conventional ALCM; GPS navigation; Rockwell single channel aided receiver; almanac data; cascaded filter; conventional air launched cruise missile; three satellite navigation capability; Biographies; Computer languages; Control systems; Explosives; Global Positioning System; Inertial navigation; Missiles; Nuclear weapons; Satellites; Testing;