Previous Abstract Return to Session A3a Next Abstract

Session A3a: Advances in MEMS-Based Inertial Sensors and Inertial Measurement Units

Rotational Testbed Simulator: An Investigation of Complex Rotational Testbed Motion for the Test and Evaluation of Inertial Measurement Units
Jason K. Bingham and Michael R. Walker II, Sandia National Laboratories
Location: Deer Valley 1-3
Date/Time: Wednesday, Apr. 30, 9:20 a.m.

The use of rotational testbeds is ubiquitous in the test and evaluation of inertial sensors and systems. Rotational testbed use is regularly reduced to static states that are employed over long integration windows leading to data aggregation. The transitions between states are ignored and data aggregation masks potentially useful signals. One challenge to utilizing data collected under non-static motion is modeling the data. In this paper, we present the structure of an open source software (OSS) package designed to model the specific forces and angular rates produced by a rotational testbed with an an arbitrary number of rotational axes. The software package is of benefit to both centrifuge and multi-axis rate table tests. We establish the usefulness of the software by performing simulations of a physical experiment performed on a three-axis rate table and comparing the simulation results to the data collected from a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) inertial measurement unit (IMU). The simulations demonstrate that table axis misalignments may be identified by comparing the results of table data to ideal simulations.
Index Terms—Inertial signals, rotational testbeds, inertial sensor testing, open source software



Previous Abstract Return to Session A3a Next Abstract