Low-Cost Angle of Arrival-Based Auxiliary Navigation System for UAV using Signals of Opportunity
Adrian Winter, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, (NTNU); Nadezda Sokolova, Aiden Morrison, Sintef Digital; Oliver Hasler, Tor Arne Johansen, NTNU
Location: Big Sur
Date/Time: Wednesday, Apr. 26, 11:26 a.m.
Abstract—Many modern devices rely on satellite navigation for reliable, precise and ubiquitous localization. While this enables technological advances that have been unthinkable a few decades ago, it also has clear implications on safety and resilience. There have been many real-world incidents where through deliberate or accidental interference, as well as simply by design, satellite navigation has been shown to be unreliable. Consequences of encountering interference can range from anywhere between minor inconveniences to catastrophic failure with loss of life. For unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), the consequences will often be significant economical damages or injury, but the risk is not high enough to justify expensive backup navigation systems that are rarely used.
This paper investigates a sensor build on low-cost commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) hardware that can be used in costal areas if localized global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) interference occurs. This sensor works by measuring the incoming angles of radio signals sent by maritime vessels as part of the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and triangulating the receiver’s position.
The measurement precision of the hardware combination is evaluated from experiments with real-world signals. It is then shown in simulations that this achievable performance can lead to a significant improvement of the vehicle’s state estimation compared to pure dead reckoning in GNSS-outage scenarios.
Index Terms—Navigation, Signals of Opportunity, UAV