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Záznamová jednotka do UL letadla / Datalogger for UL aircraftMarek, Michal January 2013 (has links)
This thesis describes the design of flight data recorder for UL aircraft. The theoretical part describes the basic principles of measurement of the quantities in relation to the operation of the aircraft, such as altitude, air speed. A separate chapter deals with systems for determining of GPS position. Furthermore, there are examples of instruments measuring these quantities. The practical part is focused on the description of selected components and their connection to PIC24FJ64GA004 microcontroller. This is followed by a description of the control of USB drives with USB Controller Vinculum-II. The work is finished by the functional test of the device.
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Identification of aerodynamic coefficients from free flight data / Identification de coefficients aérodynamiques à partir de données de vol libreAlbisser, Marie 10 July 2015 (has links)
L'utilisation des coefficients aérodynamiques pour caractériser le comportement d'un objet en vol libre demeure un sujet de recherche parmi les plus complexes et les plus étudiés dans le domaine de la balistique extérieure. La présente étude analyse l'identification des coefficients aérodynamiques à partir de données obtenues lors d'essais en vol libre. Elle vise à modéliser, définir ainsi que maîtriser les techniques d'identification de paramètres les plus adaptées au problème qu'est la détermination des coefficients aérodynamiques. Le travail de thèse a été dédié au développement d'une procédure d'identification pour la détermination des coefficients aérodynamiques à partir de mesures de vol libre et a été testée pour deux cas d'application : un corps de rentrée dans l'atmosphère et un projectile stabilisé par empennage. Cette procédure nécessite plusieurs étapes telles que la description du comportement d'un objet en vol libre sous la forme d'un modèle non linéaire en représentation d'état, la description polynomiale des coefficients aérodynamiques en fonction du nombre de Mach et de l'incidence, les analyses d'identifiabilité a priori et a posteriori suivies de l'estimation des paramètres. De plus, dans le but d'augmenter la probabilité que les coefficients caractérisent l'aérodynamique de l'objet pour l'ensemble des conditions d'essais et d'améliorer la précision des coefficients estimés, une stratégie "multiple fit" a été appliquée. Cette approche fournit une base de données de coefficients aérodynamiques, qui sont déterminés à partir de plusieurs séries de mesures analysées simultanément, afin de décrire le spectre le plus complet du mouvement de l'objet / The use of aerodynamic coefficients for the characterization of the behaviour of an object in flight remains one of the oldest and most emergent research project in the field of exterior ballistic. The present study investigates the identification of the aerodynamic coefficients based on measured data, gathered during free flight tests from different measurement techniques. This project deals with topics as modelling, defining and mastering parameter identification techniques best suited to the problem of the aerodynamic coefficients determination. In the frame of this study, an identification procedure was developed for the aerodynamic coefficients determination based on free flight measurements and was tested for two application cases: a re-entry space vehicle and a fin stabilized reference projectile. This procedure requires several steps such as the description of the behaviour of the vehicle in free flight as a nonlinear state-space model representation, the polynomial descriptions of the aerodynamic coefficients as function of Mach number and incidence, the a priori and a posteriori identifiability analyses, followed by the estimation of the parameters from free flight measurements. Moreover, to increase the probability that the coefficients define the vehicle’s aerodynamics over the entire range of test conditions and to improve the accuracy of the estimated coefficients, a multiple fit strategy was considered. This approach provides a common set of aerodynamic coefficients that are determined from multiple data series simultaneously analyzed, and gives a more complete spectrum of the vehicle’s motion
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A System Architecture for Phased Development of Remote sUAS OperationAshley, Eric 01 March 2020 (has links)
Current airspace regulations require the remote pilot-in-command of an unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) to maintain visual line of sight with the vehicle for situational awareness. The future of UAS will not have these constraints as technology improves and regulations are changed. An operational model for the future of UAS is proposed where a remote operator will monitor remote vehicles with the capability to intervene if needed. One challenge facing this future operational concept is the ability for a flight data system to effectively communicate flight status to the remote operator. A system architecture has been developed to facilitate the implementation of such a flight data system. Utilizing the system architecture framework, a Phase I prototype was designed and built for two vehicles in the Autonomous Flight Laboratory (AFL) at Cal Poly. The project will continue to build on the success of Phase I, culminating in a fully functional command and control system for remote UAS operational testing.
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Diagnostika hydraulických soustav letadel / Diagnostics of Aircraft Hydraulic SystemsBencalík, Karol January 2014 (has links)
In aviation, great emphasis is placed on aircraft safety. The current technical condition of the aircraft and its systems is an important parameter for its airworthiness. The technical condition of the elements measured during the flight should be compared to parameters specified by the manufacturer and measured in laboratory conditions. This thesis deal with the possibilities of the use of dimensionless numbers for the diagnostics of the hydrogenerator and deals with the diagnostics possibilities of selected elements.
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A Neural Network Approach To Rotorcraft Parameter EstimationKumar, Rajan 04 1900 (has links)
The present work focuses on the system identification method of aerodynamic parameter estimation which is used to calculate the stability and control derivatives required for aircraft flight mechanics. A new rotorcraft parameter estimation technique is proposed which uses a type of artificial neural network (ANN) called radial basis function network (RBFN). Rotorcraft parameter estimation using ANN is an unexplored research topic and the earlier works in this area have used the output error, equation error and filter error methods which are conventional parameter estimation methods. However, the conventional methods require an accurate non-linear rotorcraft simulation model which is not required by the ANN based method. The application of RBFN overcomes the drawbacks of multilayer perceptron (MLP) based delta method of parameter estimation and gives satisfactory results at either end of the ordered set of estimates. This makes the RBFN based delta method for parameter estimation suitable for rotorcraft studies, as both transition and high speed flight regime characteristics can be studied. The RBFN based delta method for parameter estimation is used for computation of aerodynamic parameters from both simulated and real time flight data. The simulated data is generated from an 8-DoF non-linear simulation model based on the Level-1 criteria of rotorcraft simulation modeling. The generated simulated data is used for computation of the quasi-steady and the time-variant stability and control parameters for different flight conditions using the RBFN based delta method. The performance of RBFN based delta method is also analyzed in the presence of state and measurement noise as well as outliers. The established methodology is then applied to compute parameters directly from real time flight test data for a BO 105 S123 helicopter obtained from DLR (German Aerospace Center). The parameters identified using the RBFN based delta method are compared with the identified values for the BO 105 helicopter from published literature which have used conventional parameter estimation techniques for parameter estimation using a 6-DoF and a 9-DoF rotorcraft simulation model. Finally, the estimated parameters are verified from the flight data generated by a frequency sweep pilot control input for assessing the predictive capability of the RBFN based delta method. Since the approach directly computes the parameters from flight data, it can be used for a reliable description of the higher frequency range, which is needed for high bandwidth flight control and in-flight simulation.
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System Identification And Control Of Helicopter Using Neural NetworksVijaya Kumar, M 02 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The present work focuses on the two areas of investigation: system identification of helicopter and design of controller for the helicopter.
Helicopter system identification, the first subject of investigation in this thesis, can be described as the extraction of system characteristics/dynamics from measured flight test data. Wind tunnel experimental data suffers from scale effects and model deficiencies. The increasing need for accurate models for the design of high bandwidth control system for helicopters has initiated a renewed interest in and a more active use of system identification. Besides, system identification is likely to become mandatory in the future for model validation of ground based helicopter simulators. Such simulators require accurate models in order to be accepted by pilots and regulatory authorities like Federal Aviation Regulation for realistic complementary helicopter mission training.
Two approaches are widely used for system identification, namely, black box and gray box approach. In the black-box approach, the relationship between input-output data is approximated using nonparametric methods such as neural networks and in such a case, internal details of the system and model structure may not be known. In the gray box approach, parameters are estimated after defining the model structure. In this thesis, both black box and gray box approaches are investigated.
In the black box approach, in this thesis, a comparative study and analysis of different Recurrent Neural Networks(RNN) for the identification of helicopter dynamics using flight data is investigated. Three different RNN architectures namely, Nonlinear Auto Regressive eXogenous input(NARX) model, neural network with internal memory known as Memory Neuron Networks(MNN)and Recurrent MultiLayer perceptron (RMLP) networks are used to identify dynamics of the helicopter at various flight conditions. Based on the results, the practical utility, advantages and limitations of the three models are critically appraised and it is found that the NARX model is most suitable for the identification of helicopter dynamics.
In the gray box approach, helicopter model parameters are estimated after defining the model structure. The identification process becomes more difficult as the number of degrees-of-freedom and model parameters increase. To avoid the drawbacks of conventional methods, neural network based techniques, called the delta method is investigated in this thesis. This method does not require initial estimates of the parameters and the parameters can be directly extracted from the flight data. The Radial Basis Function Network(RBFN)is used for the purpose of estimation of parameters. It is shown that RBFN is able to satisfactorily estimate stability and control derivatives using the delta method.
The second area of investigation addressed in this thesis is the control of helicopter in flight. Helicopter requires use of a control system to achieve satisfactory flight. Designing a classical controller involves developing a nonlinear model of the helicopter and extracting linearized state space matrices from the nonlinear model at various flight conditions. After examining the stability characteristics of the helicopter, the desired response is obtained using a feedback control system. The scheduling of controller gains over the entire envelope is used to obtain the desired response.
In the present work, a helicopter having a soft inplane four bladed hingeless main rotor and a four-bladed tail rotor with conventional mechanical controls is considered. For this helicopter, a mathematical model and also a model based on neural network (using flight data) has been developed.
As a precursor, a feed back controller, the Stability Augmentation System(SAS), is designed using linear quadratic regulator control with full state feedback and LQR with out put feedback approaches. SAS is designed to meet the handling qualities specification known as Aeronautical Design Standard ADS-33E-PRF. The control gains have been tuned with respect to forward speed and gain scheduling has been arrived at. The SAS in the longitudinal axis meets the requirement of the Level1 handling quality specifications in hover and low speed as well as for forward speed flight conditions. The SAS in the lateral axis meets the requirement of the Level2 handling quality specifications in both hover and low speed as well as for forward speed flight conditions.
Such conventional design of control has served useful purposes, however, it requires considerable flight testing which is time consuming, to demonstrate and tune these control law gains. In modern helicopters, the stringent requirements and non-linear maneuvers make the controller design further complicated. Hence, new design tools have to be explored to control such helicopters. Among the many approaches in adaptive control, neural networks present a potential alternative for modeling and control of nonlinear dynamical systems due to their approximating capabilities and inherent adaptive features. Furthermore, from a practical perspective, the massive parallelism and fast adaptability of neural network implementations provide more incentive for further investigation in problems involving dynamical systems with unknown non-linearity. Therefore, adaptive control approach based on neural networks is proposed in this thesis.
A neural network based Feedback Error Neural adaptive Controller(FENC) is designed for a helicopter. The proposed controller scheme is based on feedback error learning strategy in which the outer loop neural controller enhances the inner loop conventional controller by compensating for unknown non-linearity and parameter un-certainties. Nonlinear Auto Regressive eXogenous input(NARX)neural network architecture is used to approximate the control law and the controller network parameters are adapted using updated rules Lyapunov synthesis. An offline (finite time interval)and on-line adaptation strategy is used to approximate system uncertainties. The results are validated using simulation studies on helicopter undergoing an agile maneuver. The study shows that the neuro-controller meets the requirements of ADS-33 handling quality specifications.
Even though the tracking error is less in FENC scheme, the control effort required to follow the command is very high. To overcome these problems, a Direct Adaptive Neural Control(DANC)scheme to track the rate command signal is presented. The neural controller is designed to track rate command signal generated using the reference model. For the simulation study, a linearized helicopter model at different straight and level flight conditions is considered. A neural network with a linear filter architecture trained using back propagation through time is used to approximate the control law. The controller network parameters are adapted using updated rules Lyapunov synthesis. The off-line trained (for finite time interval)network provides the necessary stability and tracking performance. The on-line learning is used to adapt the network under varying flight conditions. The on-line learning ability is demonstrated through parameter uncertainties. The performance of the proposed direct adaptive neural controller is compared with feedback error learning neural controller. The performance of the controller has been validated at various flight conditions. The theoretical results are validated using simulation studies based on a nonlinear six degree-of-freedom helicopter undergoing an agile maneuver. Realistic gust and sensor noise are added to the system to study the disturbance rejection properties of the neural controllers. To investigate the on-line learning ability of the proposed neural controller, different fault scenarios representing large model error and control surface loss are considered. The performances of the proposed DANC scheme is compared with the FENC scheme. The study shows that the neuro-controller meets the requirements of ADS-33 handling quality specifications.
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Klasifikace testovacích manévrů z letových dat / Classification of Testing Maneuvers from Flight DataFuniak, Martin January 2015 (has links)
Zapisovač letových údajů je zařízení určené pro zaznamenávání letových dat z různých senzorů v letadlech. Analýza letových údajů hraje důležitou roli ve vývoji a testování avioniky. Testování a hodnocení charakteristik letadla se často provádí pomocí testovacích manévrů. Naměřená data z jednoho letu jsou uložena v jednom letovém záznamu, který může obsahovat několik testovacích manévrů. Cílem této práce je identi kovat základní testovací manévry s pomocí naměřených letových dat. Teoretická část popisuje letové manévry a formát měřených letových dat. Analytická část popisuje výzkum v oblasti klasi kace založené na statistice a teorii pravděpodobnosti potřebnou pro pochopení složitých Gaussovských směšovacích modelů. Práce uvádí implementaci, kde jsou Gaussovy směšovací modely použité pro klasifi kaci testovacích manévrů. Navržené řešení bylo testováno pro data získána z letového simulátoru a ze skutečného letadla. Ukázalo se, že Gaussovy směšovací modely poskytují vhodné řešení pro tento úkol. Další možný vývoj práce je popsán v závěrečné kapitole.
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Improving Aircraft Fuel Consumption Prediction through Ensemble Learning / Förbättrande av bränsleförbrukningsestimering genom ensembleinlärningGongzhang, Hanlin January 2022 (has links)
Performance models provided by aircraft manufacturers are used by aircraft operators to perform flight path simulations aiming to reduce aircraft fuel consumption. However, performance models are generic and does not account for the performance deviations of each aircraft individual. The performance deviations, particularly in terms of fuel consumption, will affect the dynamic programming of flight path simulations. This may result in a less optimal flight path and ultimately lead to higher fuel consumption than expected. In hope of reducing this risk, a collection of local performance factors were derived. These factors describe the percentual deviation between the real fuel flow and the levels predicted by the performance model, and are allocated with respect to a range of flight parameters in a data library known as the performance library. A test environment is then constructed to simulate a continuous flow of flight data, where a new performance library is derived from the flight data of every month. The local performance factors of the previous month are then updated with the current; a learning process based on the weighted average ensemble approach. Further, the local performance factors are used in conjunction with the performance model to estimate the aircraft fuel consumption during cruise. The observed average prediction error is noticeably smaller than that of an equivalent global, scalar performance factor used by airlines today. The result also reveals that the prediction accuracy and versatility of the performance library is mainly determined by its resolution - higher resolution generally offers better accuracy at a cost of requiring more flight data, whereas lower resolutions are more versatile but of lower accuracy. Finally, the performance libraries of two identical aircraft are used to trace the performance deviation between them. The weighted average of all local performance factors in the performance library of respective aircraft reveal that the average fuel consumption is roughly -1.9 % and -2.5 % lower than the estimates by the performance model, ultimately proving that it is feasible to detect overall fuel efficiency deviation between two identical aircraft. / Prestandamodeller tillhandhållna av flygplanstillverkarna används oftast av flygbolagen för att utföra flygruttsimuleringar i syfte att bespara bränsle. Dock är prestandamodellerna generiska och tillgodoräknar inte prestandaavvikelserna som förekommer hos varje flygplansindivid. Dessa prestandaavvikelser, speciellt i form av bränsleförbrukning, kommer att påverka den dynamiska programmeringen i flygruttssimulationen. Följde när flygrutter som kan leda till högre förbrukningar än de ursprungligen uppskattades. I hopp om att minimera denna risk beräknades mängder av lokala prestandafaktorer, vilka grundar på prestandamodellens avvikelse från verkliga flygdata. Dessa koefficienter allokerades sedan till ett databibliotek (prestandabibliotek) med avseende på en samling av flygparametrar. En testmiljö konstruerades i följd för att simulera ett kontinuerligt dataflöde. Vidare skapades ett prestandabibliotek för varje månadsflygdata, där de nyskapade lokala prestandafaktorerna viktas med de motsvarandeparterna i föregående månadens prestandabibliotek, vilket är en inlärningsprocessbaserad på viktad medelvärdesensemble. Prestandabiblioteket applicerades sedan över prestandamodellen och det snittliga uppskattning felet observerades vara märkbart mindre än det från en motsvarande global, skalärbaserad prestandafaktor. Resultatet antyder också på att prestandabibliotekets uppskattningsnoggrannhet och allsidighet beror huvudsakligen på dess upplösning - en hög upplösning leder generellt till ökad uppskattningsnoggrannhet med på bekostnad av mer flygdata, medan lägre upplösningar tenderar att vara mer allsidiga men med mindre uppskattningsnoggrannhet. Slutligen användes prestandabiblioteken av två identiska flygplan för att spåra prestandaavvikelser som förekommer mellan dem. Viktat medelvärde av alla prestandafaktorer i respektiveflygplanets prestandabibliotek tyder på att snittförbrukningen är ungefär 1,9 % respektive2,5 % lägre än det som uppskattades av prestandamodellen. Härmed bevisades att det är möjligt att spåra varianser i snittförbrukningen mellan två identiska flygplan.
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Dataset Generation in a Simulated Environment Using Real Flight Data for Reliable Runway Detection CapabilitiesTagebrand, Emil, Gustafsson Ek, Emil January 2021 (has links)
Implementing object detection methods for runway detection during landing approaches is limited in the safety-critical aircraft domain. This limitation is due to the difficulty that comes with verification of the design and the ability to understand how the object detection behaves during operation. During operation, object detection needs to consider the aircraft's position, environmental factors, different runways and aircraft attitudes. Training such an object detection model requires a comprehensive dataset that defines the features mentioned above. The feature's impact on the detection capabilities needs to be analysed to ensure the correct distribution of images in the dataset. Gathering images for these scenarios would be costly and needed due to the aviation industry's safety standards. Synthetic data can be used to limit the cost and time required to create a dataset where all features occur. By using synthesised data in the form of generating datasets in a simulated environment, these features could be applied to the dataset directly. The features could also be implemented separately in different datasets and compared to each other to analyse their impact on the object detections capabilities. By utilising this method for the features mentioned above, the following results could be determined. For object detection to consider most landing cases and different runways, the dataset needs to replicate real flight data and generate additional extreme landing cases. The dataset also needs to consider landings at different altitudes, which can differ at a different airport. Environmental conditions such as clouds and time of day reduce detection capabilities far from the runway, while attitude and runway appearance reduce it at close range. Runway appearance did also affect the runway at long ranges but only for darker runways.
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