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Examinez les méthodes sélectionnées côte à côte ; les lignes qui diffèrent sont mises en évidence.

GNSS RTK×AHRS×Reprise de route×Modèle d'erreur INS×
DomaineAérospatialeAérospatialeAérospatialeAérospatiale
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine1980s1940s1940s1960s
Auteur d'origineGPS constellationAviation heritageMaritime navigation traditionSchuler and others
TypePositioning methodSystemNavigation methodStochastic model
Source fondatriceTeunissen, P. J. G., & Kleusberg, A. (Eds.). (2003). GPS for Geodesy (2nd ed.). Springer-Verlag. link ↗Savage, P. G. (2007). Strapdown Inertial Integration Technology (2nd ed.). Strapdown Associates. link ↗Savage, P. G. (2007). Strapdown Inertial Integration Technology (2nd ed.). Strapdown Associates. link ↗Titterton, D. H., & Weston, J. L. (2004). Strapdown Inertial Navigation Technology (2nd ed.). Institution of Engineering and Technology. DOI ↗
AliasRTK, Real-Time Kinematic positioning, GNSS-RTK, differential GNSSAHRS system, attitude reference, heading sensorded reckoning, inertial navigation, odometryINS error analysis, error state kalman filter, ESKF
Apparentées3333
RésuméGlobal Navigation Satellite System Real-Time Kinematic (GNSS RTK) is a high-precision positioning technique that uses carrier phase measurements from a reference receiver at a known location to correct the position estimates of a rover receiver in real time. Developed in the 1980s, RTK exploits spatial correlation of atmospheric errors to achieve centimeter-level accuracy within tens of kilometers of the reference station. RTK is now standard in surveying, construction, autonomous vehicles, and precision agriculture.An Attitude Heading Reference System (AHRS) is a complete inertial navigation subsystem that estimates and outputs the three-dimensional orientation (attitude) and heading of a vehicle or platform. AHRS combines measurements from accelerometers, gyroscopes, and often magnetometers through sensor fusion algorithms (typically Kalman filters or complementary filters) to provide a drift-free, fast attitude estimate. AHRS is standard in aviation, marine navigation, and modern autonomous systems.Dead Reckoning is a fundamental navigation method that estimates position and heading by integrating velocity and angular rate measurements from inertial sensors over time, without external references such as GPS. The term derives from maritime tradition ('deduced reckoning') and remains a cornerstone of aerospace and autonomous vehicle navigation. Dead reckoning works reliably in GPS-denied environments and is the baseline navigation method when external navigation aids are unavailable.The INS Error Model is a mathematical framework that characterizes how errors in inertial sensor measurements propagate through a navigation system's estimates of position, velocity, and attitude. Developed during the 1960s and refined through decades of navigation research, the error model enables design of optimal estimation filters (e.g., Kalman filters) that fuse inertial measurements with external references (GNSS, LiDAR, cameras) to bound and correct accumulated errors. The error model is fundamental to understanding and improving inertial navigation performance.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: GNSS RTK · AHRS · Dead Reckoning · INS Error Model. Consulté le 2026-06-18 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare