High integrity stochastic modeling of GPS receiver clock for improved positioning and fault detection performance

Author(s):  
Fang-Cheng Chan ◽  
Mathieu Joerger ◽  
Boris Pervan
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenping Zhang ◽  
Feng Liu ◽  
Zhenxing He ◽  
Lixin Xu ◽  
Guijun Hu

Processes ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 122
Author(s):  
Yang Li ◽  
Fangyuan Ma ◽  
Cheng Ji ◽  
Jingde Wang ◽  
Wei Sun

Feature extraction plays a key role in fault detection methods. Most existing methods focus on comprehensive and accurate feature extraction of normal operation data to achieve better detection performance. However, discriminative features based on historical fault data are usually ignored. Aiming at this point, a global-local marginal discriminant preserving projection (GLMDPP) method is proposed for feature extraction. Considering its comprehensive consideration of global and local features, global-local preserving projection (GLPP) is used to extract the inherent feature of the data. Then, multiple marginal fisher analysis (MMFA) is introduced to extract the discriminative feature, which can better separate normal data from fault data. On the basis of fisher framework, GLPP and MMFA are integrated to extract inherent and discriminative features of the data simultaneously. Furthermore, fault detection methods based on GLMDPP are constructed and applied to the Tennessee Eastman (TE) process. Compared with the PCA and GLPP method, the effectiveness of the proposed method in fault detection is validated with the result of TE process.


2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 075105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ta-Kang Yeh ◽  
Cheinway Hwang ◽  
Guochang Xu ◽  
Chuan-Sheng Wang ◽  
Chien-Chih Lee

2000 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-292
Author(s):  
P. B. Ober

While position integrity is crucial when positioning systems are to be used for safety-critical operations such as in aviation applications, current positioning algorithms are generally optimised for accuracy instead. Even when they are combined with fault detection and exclusion schemes, these algorithms still give sub-optimal integrity. This paper promotes a new method of algorithm design that takes integrity rather than accuracy as the parameter to optimise. The new class of high-integrity positioning algorithms described aims to improve integrity with both current and new systems not by improving the physical infrastructure, but by using clever algorithmic optimisation in the receiver. A small simulation example shows that the integrity and availability of un-augmented GPS for non-precision approach can indeed be improved substantially.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document