Electrotechnology has been a significant factor in the evolution of guidance and control (G & C) over the last half century. Ship stabilizers that used rotating wheels for brute force control were electrically driven. However, the first pilotless aircraft, developed in World War I, was controlled primarily with pneumatic servos. Inertial guidance and electronic control systems surfaced at Peenemunde around World War II. Advances in fire control servos led to development of the floated gyro and ushered in precision inertial navigators. Digital electronics replaced analog designs, so that the level of G & C sophistication increased dramatically. As digital computers became smaller and more powerful their use proliferated. The manned space program in the 60's saw substantial improvements in electronics reliability and performance. The successful first launch of the Space Shuttle, with all its complexity, is a tribute to electronics progress. It is difficult to predict what G & C advances electrotechnology will bring in the next 50 years.


    Access

    Check access

    Check availability in my library

    Order at Subito €


    Export, share and cite



    Title :

    From Autopilot to Strapdown: Electrotechnology in Inertial Guidance and Control


    Contributors:

    Published in:

    Publication date :

    1984-07-01


    Size :

    4402364 byte




    Type of media :

    Article (Journal)


    Type of material :

    Electronic Resource


    Language :

    English




    Tactical guidance requirements for strapdown inertial

    Mueller, C.E. / Phelps, R.K. / Scheidenhelm, R. | Tema Archive | 1977



    Strapdown stellar-inertial guidance system for launch vehicle

    Zhang, Lijun / Yang, Huabo / Zhang, Shifeng et al. | Elsevier | 2014