DocumentCode :
2207328
Title :
Comparison of low-cost GPS/INS sensors for Autonomous Vehicle applications
Author :
Elkaim, G.H. ; Lizarraga, M. ; Pedersen, L.
Author_Institution :
Autonomous Syst. Lab., California Univ., Santa Cruz, CA
fYear :
2008
fDate :
5-8 May 2008
Firstpage :
1133
Lastpage :
1144
Abstract :
Autonomous Vehicle applications (Unmanned Ground Vehicles, Micro-Air Vehicles, UAVpsilas, and Marine Surface Vehicles) all require accurate position and attitude to be effective. Commercial units range in both cost and accuracy, as well as power, size, and weight. With the advent of low-cost blended GPS/INS solutions, several new options are available to accomplish the positioning task. In this work, we experimentally compare three commercially available, off-the-shelf units insitu, in terms of both position, and attitude. The compared units are a Microbotics MIDG-II, a Tokimec VSAS-2GM, along with a KVH Fiber Optic Gyro. The position truth measure is from a Trimble Ag122 DGPS receiver, and the attitude truth is from the KVH in yaw. Care is taken to make sure that all measurements are taken simultaneously, and that the sensors are all mounted rigidly to the vehicle chassis. A series of measurement trials are performed, including light driving on coastal roads and highway speeds, static bench testing, and flight data taken in a light aircraft both flying up the coast as well as aggressively maneuvering. Allan Variance analysis performed on all of the sensors, and their noise characteristics are compared directly. A table is included with the final consistent models for these sensors, and a methodology for creating such models for any additional sensors as they are made available. The Microbotics MIDG-II demonstrates performance that is superior to the Tokimec VSAS-2GM, both in terms of raw positioning data, as well as attitude data. While both perform quite well during flight, the MIDG is much better during driving tests. This is due to the MIDG internal tightly-coupled architecture, which is able to better fuse the GPS information with the noisy inertial sensor measurements.
Keywords :
Global Positioning System; inertial navigation; mobile robots; sensors; KVH fiber optic gyro; Tokimec VSAS-2GM; UAV; autonomous vehicle application; low-cost GPS/INS sensors; marine surface vehicles; microair vehicles; microbotics MIDG-II; unmanned ground vehicles; vehicle chassis; Global Positioning System; Land vehicles; Marine vehicles; Mobile robots; Performance evaluation; Remotely operated vehicles; Road vehicles; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Testing; Unmanned aerial vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Position, Location and Navigation Symposium, 2008 IEEE/ION
Conference_Location :
Monterey, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1536-6
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1537-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PLANS.2008.4570000
Filename :
4570000
Link To Document :
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