Observability of Strapdown INS Alignment: A Global Perspective
Yuanxin Wu, Hongliang Zhang, Meiping Wu, Xiaoping Hu, Dewen Hu

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive global approach to analyze the observability of strapdown INS alignment, revealing how different maneuvers affect the system's ability to estimate states accurately.
Contribution
It introduces a global, nonlinear perspective on strapdown INS observability, addressing limitations of previous linearized analyses and providing practical insights for alignment strategies.
Findings
Complete observability with two-axis rotation
Nearly observable with single-axis rotation and known unobservable states
Simulations confirm theoretical analysis and practical implications
Abstract
Alignment of the strapdown inertial navigation system (INS) has strong nonlinearity, even worse when maneuvers, e.g., tumbling techniques, are employed to improve the alignment. There is no general rule to attack the observability of a nonlinear system, so most previous works addressed the observability of the corresponding linearized system by implicitly assuming that the original nonlinear system and the linearized one have identical observability characteristics. Strapdown INS alignment is a nonlinear system that has its own characteristics. Using the inherent properties of strapdown INS, e.g., the attitude evolution on the SO(3) manifold, we start from the basic definition and develop a global and constructive approach to investigate the observability of strapdown INS static and tumbling alignment, highlighting the effects of the attitude maneuver on observability. We prove that…
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