Unit-5 Introduction To Avionic System
Unit-5 Introduction To Avionic System
Commuication systemsnavigation systems Flight Control systems Radar & Electronic Warfare Utility system for reliability and maintainability Certification
Syllabus
Commuication systemsnavigation systems Flight Control systems Radar & Electronic Warfare Utility system for reliability and maintainability Certification
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Navigation systems
VOR ILS DME GPS
2. 3.
4.
5.
Communication Systems
1. VHF Communication for Rx 100-150 MHz fir range 200 miles @ 20,000ft. 2. Long Range, HF communication @ 220MHz thru a long wire antenna between fuselage land fin 3. ATC transponder at the aircraft thru pulses giving the position & height to the ATC controller
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Navigation System
1.
2. 3. 4. 5.
Doppler Navigation: thru a Doppler radar at the aircraft thru a single pulse and finding the delay, giving ground speed and drift LORAN-using hyperbola principle using various 100 KHz TX-s and the intersections indicating the position GPS-giving position fixes from RX signals thru various global satellites Inertial Navigation-offering acceleration information on a stabilized aircraft Electronic Counter Measure-giving false signals to confuse enemy aircrafts
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2)
3)
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Control-Types
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Fire-control Surveillance Navigation Missile control air defence IFF and secondary surveillance Land-based, airborne and naval Military air traffic control
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Radar-Types
1. Air Traffic Control ATC Radar 2. Tracking Radar-Surface to Air and Air to Air 3. Ballistic Missile-Military Radar 4. Satellite SAR Reconnisance
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Surveillance Radar
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ATC Radar
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Military Radar-Objectives
1. Targeting fixed and movable objects 2. Striking using Radio Frequency & Infra Red Sensors 3. Prediction and measurement of Radar Cross Section-Stealth
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ELECTRONIC WARFARE
Principle, Measures,Jamming, ECM ECCM
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Electronic Warfare-Definition
Using Radio frequency or IR for determining, exploiting , reducing , or preventing enemy to use electromagnetic spectrum- called Electronic Warfare in Defense Use Directed energy or EM spectrum to attack the enemy EW applied from air, sea, land, and space by manned and unmanned systems
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Key Activity
Objective
1. Electronic attack (EA), 2. Electronic Protect (EP), and 3. Electronic warfare support (ES)
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Warfare-Types
1. Passive Warfare- by Earthorbiting satellites, aircraft, ships, aircrafts
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Devices used
1. Towered Decoys-to avoid an incoming missile 2. Airborne POD and Internal ECM 3. Ship borne ECM 4. Battlefield ECM
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Decoy by Raytheon
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ELECTRONIC WARFARE
ELECTRONIC SUPPORT MEASURES ESM
JAMMING ELECTRONIC COUNTER MEASURES
ELECTRONIC COUNTER COJNTER MEASURES ECCM
ECM
DECEPTION
DENIAL
FREQ
IR DECOY
EMISSION
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ECM Function
1. Disable enemy radar 2. Detect RF Sensor, identity their source, determine the source for optimum response called RWR-Radar Warning Rear 3. ELINT & ESM fed to RWR which protect the data on hostile system
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ECM
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ECM
RWR
ELINT
ESM
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Internal ECM
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Jamming
1. Jamming Types
1. Mechanical Jamming by Chaff, Corner Reflector, Decoys 2. Electronic Jamming by Spot jamming, Sweep jamming, DRFM (digital radio frequency jamming)
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ECCM
Objective and methods
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Objective
1. Methods to reduce or eliminate the effect of Electronic Countermeasures (ECM) on electronic sensors towards Aircrafts, vehicles and missiles 2. Using Infra-Red (IR) decoy flares and radar countermeasure chaff for protecting aircraft from heat soaking and radar-guided missiles
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Techniques
1. Chirping or Pulse Compression, or linear frequency modulation-increasing the signal strength received by Radar RX 2. Frequency Hopping-by rapidly switching off the TX and Switching On the RX 3. Sidelobe banking- detecting the signal from the side lobe of the main antenna 4. Polarization-using a cross polarized antenna 5. Radiation homing-targetting enemies radiation source
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FBW
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Principle of FBW
"Fly-by-Wire" (FBW) imply an electrically-signaled only control system. new way of sending signals from the cockpit to the other parts of the airplane signals tell a part of the aircraft (i.e., flaps, horizontal stabilizer, rudder, engines) to move a certain amount. computers read and refine the signal before letting it continue This helps the pilot in times of bad 47 weather (turbulence) and some
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Digital
creases electronic stability, because the system is less dependent on the values of critical electrical components in an analog controller. The computers "read" position and force inputs from the pilot's controls and aircraft sensors. Side-sticks, center sticks, or conventional control yokes can be used to fly such an aircraft. 52
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Certification
Types, Certification need for Civil Aircraft, Software and Hardware, DO178B,
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Certification
1. Certification steps producing a deliverable document, code, or a test report for an avionic system or a Flight carrier 2. When the software passes all of its tests these are bound into a certification report, the avionic software is certified.
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DO178B
Certification is a guidance for software development published by RTCA, Incorporated. The standard was developed by RTCA and EUROCAE. The FAA accepts use of DO-178B as a means of certifying software in avionics he FAA accepts use of DO-178B59
Software level
Catastrophic - Failure may cause a crash. Hazardous - Failure has a large negative impact on safety or performance, or reduces the ability of the crew to operate the plane due to physical distress or a higher workload, or causes serious or fatal injuries among the passengers. Major - Failure is significant, but has a lesser impact than a Hazardous failure (for example, leads to passenger discomfort rather than injuries). Minor - Failure is noticeable, but has a lesser impact than a Major failure (for example, causing passenger 60 inconvenience or a routine flight plan change)
Software level
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Avionic Certification
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certification of a new aircraft avionic system Upon activation of the system, pilots can significantly enhance visibility in poor weather --including darkness, smoke, smog, haze and other weather events--while simultaneously seeing critical flight data A unique application of Honeywell 62 International "Head Up Display"