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Introduction To RNAV: ICAO PBN Workshop Tanzania

A resume for the RNAV process

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
150 views33 pages

Introduction To RNAV: ICAO PBN Workshop Tanzania

A resume for the RNAV process

Uploaded by

Leonel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 33

ICAO PBN Workshop

Tanzania

Introduction to RNAV
Outlines

Introduction to RNAV
• Introduction
• Conventional vs RNAV
• RNAV positioning
• RNAV calculator

Page 2

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Introduction to RNAV System

« Area navigation (RNAV). A method of navigation which


permits aircraft operation on any desired flight path within the
coverage of station-referenced navigation aids or within the limits
of the capability of self-contained navigation aids, or a
combination of these. »

Page 3

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV System - History Some history

Visual References (Stars…)

Instrument landing System: 1938

Copyright 2009 © Quovadis S.A.S. All rights reserved


VOR (Airways): 1960s

Introduction of 2D RNAV VOR/DME: 1975

GPS navigation: 1994 RNP: 1996

PBN ICAO mandate: 2016

Page 4

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV System - History

• RNAV began in the US in the 1970’s and the certification/approval


requirements followed evolutions of this concept and of its associated
technologies.
• AC 90-45 « Approval of area navigation systems for use in the US NAS »
issued in 1969.
• AC 90-45A issued in 1975
• 2D RNAV with vertical guidance for advisory
• Positioning based on VOR/DME
• AC 20-130 Approval of multi-sensor navigation system for use in the US
NAS » issued in 1988.
• Positioning based on VOR/DME, DME/DME and/or Inertial
• AC 20-130A issued in 1995 addressing FMS and GPS systems.
• AC 90-100A (RNAV for Enroute and Terminal area) and AC 90-101 (RNAV
for specific approaches: RNP AR) issued in 2007
•…
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© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Conventional navigation versus RNAV

Page 6

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Conventional Routes

• Defined based on old aircraft capabilities and use of conventional navigation


means
• Large protection areas and separation criteria to cope with limited accuracy of
position estimation

• Based on Ground Navigation Aids


• Overfly
• Relative position

Ground
• Limited design flexibility NAVAIDs
• Leading to traffic saturation Eg: VOR/NDB

Widely used but no more suitable due to traffic increase


and high fuel cost
Page 7

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV Definition

• RNAV stands for Area Navigation


• RNAV : Capability to fly any desired flight path, defined by waypoints such as
geographic fixes (LAT/LONG) and not necessarily by ground navaids
Ground
navaids

Waypoint
RNAV capability is linked to aircraft on-board equipments (RNAV systems)
8

RNAV is a method of navigation allowing for the definition of


Page 8
more direct routes
© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV advantage

VOR/DME WPT

town NDB runway

VOR/DME

Page 9

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
PBN Predictability

KATL Before RNAV Departures

Four departure fixes

Page 10
10

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
PBN Predictability

KATL After RNAV Departures

Eight departure fixes

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© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
The RNAV system

Page 12

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV system - Basic principle

Human – Machine Interface


(ex keyboard, ,…)
Displays

Sensor RNAV Computer AP FD


positioning Annunciators
Path definition …..
Defined in
Navigation DataBase

Page 13

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV positioning Positioning
sensor

• Determine the aircraft position (latitude and longitude)


• The aircraft can determine its position on the following sensors:
• GNSS
• DME/DME
• VOR/DME
• Inertial

Page 14

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : GNSS

Based on GPS constellation


A constellation of 24 satellites* into 6 orbital planes

Position calculated Worldwide coverage


in the WGS84
reference system

Actual accuracy Usable all phases of


within about ten flight
meters

* USA engagement on the minimal GPS constellation

1 Page 15
5
© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : GNSS

1. Measurement of the distance user – 2


satellite from time information (satellite .
and user clocks)
4
2. GPS signal contains satellite position

3. Determination of the navigation solution


by triangulation 1
4. Error calculation 3

GPS user positioning accuracy


(95% of time, global average)
Annexe 10 – attachement D
Horizontal position error 33 m (108 ft) SA ON – 13m (43 ft) SA OFF

Vertical position error 73 m (240 ft) SA ON – 22m (72ft) SA OFF

Page 16

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : GNSS

• GPS alone performance does not meet ICAO requirements for navigation
• ABAS Autonomous Based Augmentation System is required to check integrity of the GPS data
• Horizintal Alarm Limit (HAL)
• 2 Nm (En route), 1 Nm (Terminal area) and 0.3 Nm (Final Approach)
• Two techniques:
RAIM AAIM
Stand-alone integrity control by the receiver Stand-alone integrity control by the aircraft
Stand-alone GNSS receiver Multi-sensors system
Multi-sensors system
Based on the redundancy and the geometry of GPS Based on the combination of GNSS signal with other
satellites sensors (example: inertial system)

• Accuracy (NSE) (on board – TSO C129 performance requirements)


• 0.124 Nm (95%) in En-route and Terminal area
• 0.056 Nm (95%) in Approach
RAIM : Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring
AAIM : Aircraft Autonomous Integrity Monitoring

Page 17

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
13/10/2014

A need to trust “SIS” for safe operation

GPS or Satellites may broadcast


GLONASS  Erroneous signal for hours
 Distance errors

Erroneous clock or ephemeris data


 Positioning errors

Users needs
 To know quality of computed position
 To be warned if anything goes wrong

This is checking integrity of SIS


© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
13/10/2014

GNSS integrity monitoring

GNSS integrity monitoring techniques aim at monitoring the quality of GNSS


positioning

Large variety of techniques:


In an autonomous manner (ABAS) :
Using the redundancy of GNSS measurements only (RAIM )
Using additional information from other sensors (AAIM)

Using a ground station (GBAS)


Using a network of ground stations (SBAS)

All these systems can include Fault Detection (FD) or Fault Detection and
Exclusion (FDE)

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
13/10/2014

A need to trust “SIS” for safe operation


 4 satellites to determine 3D position
GPS or GLONASS and time

 Usually more satellite are available


(6 to 12)

 RAIM uses
 5 satellites for fault detection (FD)
 6 satellites for fault detection and
exclusion (FDE)

 RAIM provides integrity and warning


RAIM

RAIM on board function to guarantee integrity


© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : GNSS

Note that : for approach the GPS can be completed with


• a satellite based augmentation signal SBAS (ex WAAS, EGNOS)
• Increase precision and integrity => used for Approach with vertical guidance (part of
PBN)
• A ground based augmentation signal – GBAS
• Used for precision approach (not part of PBN)

Page 21

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : DME/DME

• Position calculated (lat&long) from 2 DME distances

• To have the accuracy performance within 1NM:


30°≤ θ ≤150°
DME2
• FMS constraints: (lat&long)

3NM < d <160NM


θ
d
•The DME is selected and tuned by the RNAV
system
•Scanning DME (with multiple chanel)
DME1
(lat&long)

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : RNAV Inertial

• Autonomous Navigation
• Positioning
• Position determined through computations based on accelerometer and laser gyro sensed
signals
• IRU senses accelerations along and rotation about each of the three axis.
• Inertial drift
• 2Nm/hour
• High drift rate the first ½ hour of navigation (8Nm/hour)
• Alignment of IRS is required before the flight
• IRS alignment consists of determining local vertical and initial position and angles.
• with / without automatic radio updating of aircraft position
• Inertial data can be used to update GPS data and provide an Hybrid GPIRS position (e.g Airbus
aircraft).

Page 23

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Positioning : VOR/DME

• Use of VOR/DME
• Position computed from a DME distance and a VOR angle
(bearing)
• Accuracy
• Depend on the distance from the station
• The VOR/DME is selected and tuned by RNAV
• Positioning not accurate enough (no future)

Page 24
24
© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document. VOR/DME
RNAV calculator

• Compute a guidance to follow the required path


• Based on the positioning
• Based on a selected trajectory

• Positioning can use one or several positions


– Simple (ex GPS),
– Hybridization (ex GPIRS),
– IRS Radio update (ex IRS/DME),
– Blended position (ex W1IRS+ W2 Radio+ W3 GPS)

• Selected Trajectory
– By the pilot
– Flight Plan, route, procedure,…

Page 25

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV computer and the coding cycle

ARINC 424 : standardizes waypoints


path terminators and routes «
depiction »
Translation of the route or the
procedure from the paper chart into
an electronic format

Page 26

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV computer - ARINC 424 - Waypoints

Two types of waypoints for two different trajectories :

Fly-over waypoint Fly-by waypoint

Page 27

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Example of ARINC 424 path terminator

Several different trajectories may exist to reach the same point

DF: Direct to Fix

TF: Track to Fix

CF: Course to Fix

According to the path terminator, the trajectory is more or less predictable


Page 28

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Other example of ARINC 424 path terminator

• Transition with repeatability of the path

RF leg can be used in terminal area and Approach For routes R will depend on the level of the
transition

Radius to Fix (RF leg) Fixed Radius Turn (FRT)

Page 29

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
Examples of RNAV Avionics Architecture

Page 30

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV architecture for General aviation example – Stand alone

Remote annunciator and


selection

Display system slaved to


the route to be flown NSE

Flight Technical Error (FTE)

Standalone RNAV system


Page 31

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
RNAV architecture for air transport aircraft – Multisensors

Display
selection Display
selection
Flight
Director/Autopi
lot selection

Displays Displays

MCDU MCDU

Sensors FMC 1 FMC 2 Sensors


Page 32

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.
End of the presentation

Thank you for your attention – Any question ?

Page 33

© AIRBUS Operations S.A.S. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary document.

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