Welcome to the NavList Message Boards.

NavList:

A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding

Compose Your Message

Message:αβγ
Message:abc
Add Images & Files
    Name or NavList Code:
    Email:
       
    Reply
    Re: automatic celestial navigation
    From: Greg R_
    Date: 2008 Jan 9, 12:10 -0800

    Wonder if those ANS units have been declassified and are now available
    on the surplus market? Although I think the inertial part of it might
    be a little pragmatic on a sailboat... ;-) (Though maybe it actually
    *could* actually track the various pitching/rolling/etc. movements?).
    
    --
    GregR
    
    
    
    --- Dan Allen  wrote:
    
    > 
    > 
    > On Nov 28, 2007, at 11:25 PM, Paul Hirose wrote:
    > 
    > > Interestingly, that paper says the SR-71 astro-inertial unit had a
    > > catalog of 57 stars. I wonder if those were the same 57 stars
    > listed  
    > > in
    > > the nautical almanac.
    > 
    > I was reading today in Richard H. Graham's excellent "SR-71 Revealed:
    >  
    > The Inside Story" (Motorbooks, 1996) and came across this info where 
    > 
    > he -- an SR-71 pilot and squadron commander, and retired head of all 
    > 
    > SR-71s, so he is an authority -- states there were 61 stars in the  
    > SR-71 catalog.  Here is an extract from pages 65 and 66 of his book:
    > 
    > ---
    > 
    > Navigational Systems
    > 
    > The SR-71�s high speed and sensitive missions demanded a navigational
    >  
    > system that was highly accurate, reliable, and didn�t depend on
    > inputs  
    > from other sources subject to electronic jamming. Patterned after  
    > navigational systems used on ICBMs, the SR-71�s Astro-inertial  
    > Navigation System (ANS) filled those requirements. Simplistically,
    > the  
    > ANS was a star tracking navigation system. At least two different  
    > stars had to be tracked for optimum navigation performance. With a  
    > highly accurate chronometer (to the 100th of a second) supplying  
    > Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) and the Julian date, along with a 61-star  
    > catalog stored inside the ANS computer, it was possible to know  
    > precisely where SR-71 was over the ground.
    > 
    > Selection of which star to track was made by the ANS computer a  
    > function of latitude, longitude, day of year, time of day, aircraft  
    > pitch and roll, and location of the sun. The computer selected a star
    >  
    > by going through its star catalog, which was arranged in decreasing  
    > star brightness until it found a star. A telescope-like star tracker 
    > 
    > looked for the stars in an expanding rectangular spiral search  
    > pattern. The ANS window was located on top of the fuselage, just  
    > forward of the air refueling door and consisted of a round piece of  
    > distortion-free quartz glass (about 9 inch diameter) that allowed the
    >  
    > star tracker to see through.
    > 
    > On the cockpit ANS panel a star �ON� light indicated that a minimum
    > of  
    > two different stars had been tracked within the last five minutes.  
    > Star tracking was automatic. However, the RSO could assist the system
    >  
    > in overcoming conditions such as overcasts, changes of sky background
    >  
    > brightness, long periods of ground time, and air refueling when the  
    > boom obscures the tracking window. Former RSO, Col. Phil Loignon  
    > (Ret), recalls a sortie he flew over North Vietnam that changed
    > future  
    > ANS procedures.
    > 
    > Jim Watkins and I launched on a operational sortie. We had solid
    > cloud  
    > cover to 60,000 feet and no star lock on at coast in. A viewsight fix
    >  
    > revealed a position error, so I updated the ANS. After exiting North 
    > 
    > Vietnam, the �STAR� light came on, and our track showed a 10 nautical
    >  
    > mile error. The inquisition hy the 15th Air Force following that was 
    > 
    > something to hehold. We had flown over Hanoi instead of 10 miles
    > away.  
    > Our error had allowed intelligence to determine that a new device on 
    > 
    > the North Vietnam radar sites was actually an optical device for  
    > tracking low level fighters. Although I was thought to have �screwed 
    > 
    > up,� Lockheed came through with the determinations that the ANS  
    > tracked a light bulb in the hangar and had induced a heading error.
    > We  
    > changed our ANS turn-on procedures as of that date.
    > 
    > By comparing the position of the stars to their known location, and  
    > with the exact time of day, the ANS could then compute the aircraft�s
    >  
    > precise position. A normal gyro compass alignment of the ANS required
    >  
    > 36 minutes of warm-up time and provided the SR-71 with great-circle  
    > navigational accuracy of 1,885 feet (0.3 nautical mile) for up to ten
    >  
    > hours of flying time. It still amazes me even today that astronomers 
    > 
    > have charted our solar system so accurately that it allows the ANS to
    >  
    > calculate the SR-71�s position so precisely. Things may change here
    > on  
    > Earth from century to century, but the same stars guided both  
    > Christopher Columbus and Habus.
    > 
    > The heart of the ANS was a large, self-contained unit�about half the 
    > 
    > size of a large refrigerator�called the Guidance Group. A computer  
    > inside the Guidance Group computed auto-navigation, guidance and  
    > avionics control, and maintained a continuously updated account of  
    > navigational status and coordinate values. The computer also stored  
    > instrument and mathematical coefficients, predetermined data  
    > references that defined the stars, and the mission flight plan. For  
    > continuous accuracy. the computer initiated and evaluated self-tests 
    > 
    > periodically throughout the flight. Software corrections to the star 
    > 
    > data were provided for the supersonic shock wave over the star
    > tracker  
    > window that refracts the star light and for pressure and temperature 
    > 
    > gradients acting on the window causing optical lens effects.
    > 
    > The aircraft�s flight plan and sensor operation for the entire
    > mission  
    > were contained on a wide tape punched with holes and loaded inside
    > the  
    > Guidance Group computer memory. The tape was made by the 9th SRW�s  
    > Mission Planning Branch, a group of highly experienced Air Force  
    > officers who knew how to plan SR-71 missions down to the finest  
    > detail. Many former SR-71 RSOs worked as mission planners to provide 
    > 
    > expertise. As the tape ran inside the Guidance Group, the pattern of 
    > 
    > holes �told� the aircraft where to navigate, what bank angle for  
    > turns, when various sensors were to turn ON/OFF, and where to have
    > the  
    > sensors �look� for intelligence gathering.
    > 
    > Prior to every flight, ANS maintenance personnel loaded the tape and 
    > 
    > ran the Guidance Group in their shop to insure the programming was  
    > correct. The Guidance Group was delivered to the aircraft several  
    > hours before flight. It was hoisted up by a crane assembly and slowly
    >  
    > lowered into its air conditioned bay located directly in front of the
    >  
    > air refueling door. Once inside its bay, numerous electrical, air  
    > conditioning, and computer connections were completed, mating the  
    > Guidance Group to the aircraft. An exterior aircraft panel containing
    >  
    > the star tracker window bolted over the Guidance Group.
    > 
    > The RSO had all the ANS controls in his cockpit. On the ANS panel,
    > the  
    > RSO had a constant digital readout of longitude and latitude, wind  
    > direction and velocity, time to turn, and distance to the next turn  
    > point. By use of his keyboard a variety of other information was  
    > available from the ANS display panel, such as ground speed and true  
    > air speed. As long as everything was working satisfactorily, the RSO 
    > 
    > monitored the readouts to insure their accuracy. At any time, the RSO
    >  
    > could manually override the ANS�s preprogrammed flight path and
    > sensor  
    > action points, if required. It was an automatic abort if the ANS  
    > wasn�t working correctlv, and since Don had first-hand knowledge of  
    > that, he had total responsibility in making abort decisions
    > concerning  
    > our navigational accuracy. If we were in clouds or couldn�t achieve a
    >  
    > satisfactory star lock-on, the SR71 navigated by an inertial-only  
    > guidance system. The inertial system had to be aligned and was
    > updated  
    > automatically by the ANS when it was navigating normally. By using
    > fix  
    > points every hour, the inertial-only system maintained a navigational
    >  
    > accuracy of two nautical miles per hour.
    > 
    > ---
    > 
    > Exciting!  I wish I had a pocket star tracker.
    > 
    > Dan
    > 
    > 
    > 
    > > 
    > 
    
    
    --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
    To post to this group, send email to NavList@navlist.net
    To , send email to NavList-@navlist.net
    -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
    

       
    Reply
    Browse Files

    Drop Files

    NavList

    What is NavList?

    NavList is a community devoted to the preservation and practice of celestial navigation and other methods of traditional position-finding. We're a group of navigators, navigation enthusiasts and hobbyists, mathematicians and physicists, and historians interested in all aspects of navigation but primarily those techniques which are non-electronic.

    To post a message, if you are already signed up as a NavList member, start a new discussion or reply to any posted message and use your posting code (this is a simple low-security password assigned when you join). You may also join by posting. Your first on-topic messsage automatically makes you a member, and a posting code will be assigned and emailed to you for future posts.

    Uniquely, the NavList message boards also permit full interaction entirely by email. You can optionally receive individual posts or daily digests by email, and any member can post messages by email (bypassing the web site) by sending to our posting address which is "NavList@NavList.net". This functionality is similar to a traditional Internet mailing list: post by email, read by email, reply by email. Most members will prefer the web interface here for posting and replying to messages.

    NavList is more than an online community... more about that another day.

    © Copyright notice: please note that the rights to all messages and posts in this discussion group are held by their respective authors. No messages or text or images extracted from messages may be reproduced without the explicit consent of the message author. Email me, Frank Reed, if you have any questions.

    Join / Get NavList ID Code

    Name:
    (please, no nicknames or handles)
    Email:
    Do you want to receive all group messages by email?
    Yes No

    A NavList ID Code guarantees your identity in NavList posts and allows faster posting of messages.

    Retrieve a NavList ID Code

    Enter the email address associated with your NavList messages. Your NavList code will be emailed to you immediately.
    Email:

    Email Settings

    NavList ID Code:

    Custom Index

    Subject:
    Author:
    Start date: (yyyymm dd)
    End date: (yyyymm dd)

    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site
    Visit this site