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Inertial Navigation and Robot Turning
Its my understanding that an inertial navigation systems basically use two accellerometers to judge the robots realative position by integrating twice. What I don't understand is how the system deals with turning. If the robot turns, all further readings would be off. Is another sensor (compass?) required? Am I missing something obvious?
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Re: Inertial Navigation and Robot Turning
conventional inertail navigation systems used gyroscopes on gimbal bearings that allowed the system to determine how far it has turned on each axis
you can now get solid state yaw rate sensors that put out a signal proportional to the rate at which its being turned on one axis - if you wanted to make a 3D system you would use 3 of them search the forum for 'yaw rate' sensor or 'gyro' - there lots of threads already - more than I could type out in a hour - that explain where to get them and how to use them but in essence - their output is in degrees/second - so by simply accumulating the output (repeatedly adding it to a large variable) you end up with degrees - compass heading. the ADXRS150EB (or something like that) is the most common one to use - you can get em for $50 |
Re: Inertial Navigation and Robot Turning
<mr. burns>Excellent...</mr. burns> ;)
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