Strapdown Attitude Computation: Functional Iterative Integration versus Taylor Series Expansion

09/22/2019
by   Yuanxin Wu, et al.
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This paper compares two basic approaches to solving ordinary differential equations, which form the basis for attitude computation in strapdown inertial navigation systems, namely, the Taylor series expansion approach that was used in its low-order form for deriving all mainstream algorithms and the functional iterative integration approach developed recently. They are respectively applied to solve the kinematic equations of major attitude parameters, including the quaternion, the Rodrigues vector and the rotation vector. Specifically, the mainstream algorithms, which have unexceptionally relied on the simplified rotation vector, are considerably extended by the Taylor series expansion approach using the exact rotation vector and recursive calculation of high-order derivatives. The functional iterative integration approach is respectively implemented on both the normal polynomial and the Chebyshev polynomial. Numerical results under the classical coning motion are reported to assess all derived attitude algorithms. It is revealed that in the relative frequency range when the coning to sampling frequency ratio is below 0.05-0.1 (depending on the chosen polynomial truncation order), all algorithms have the same order of accuracy if the same number of samples are used to fit the angular velocity over the iteration interval; in the range of higher relative frequency, the group of Quat/Rod/RotFIter algorithms (by the functional iterative integration approach combined with the Chebyshev polynomial) perform the best in both accuracy and robustness to the Runge phenomenon, thanks to the excellent numerical stability and powerful functional representation capability of the Chebyshev polynomial.

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