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Under-ice acoustic navigation using real-time model-aided range estimation
Author(s) -
EeShan Bhatt,
Oscar A. Víquez,
Henrik Schmidt
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the journal of the acoustical society of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.619
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1520-8524
pISSN - 0001-4966
DOI - 10.1121/10.0010260
Subject(s) - beacon , gnss applications , pseudorange , computer science , underwater , real time computing , range (aeronautics) , global positioning system , simulation , engineering , geology , telecommunications , aerospace engineering , oceanography
The long baseline (LBL) underwater navigation paradigm relies on the conversion of travel times into pseudoranges to trilaterate position. For real-time autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) operations, this conversion assumes an isovelocity sound speed. For re-navigation, computationally and/or labor-intensive acoustic modeling may be employed to reduce uncertainty. This work demonstrates a real-time ray-based prediction of the effective sound speed along a path from source to receiver. This method was implemented for an AUV-LBL system in the Beaufort Sea in an ice-covered and a double-ducted propagation environment. Given the lack of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) data throughout the vehicle's mission, the pseudorange performance is first evaluated on acoustic transmissions between GNSS-linked beacons. The mean real-time absolute range error between beacons is roughly 11 m at distances up to 3 km. A consistent overestimation in the real-time method provides insights for improved eigenray filtering by the number of bounces. An operationally equivalent pipeline is used to reposition the LBL beacons and re-navigate the AUV, using modeled, historical, and locally observed sound speed profiles. The best re-navigation error is 1.84 ± 2.19 m root mean square. The improved performance suggests that this approach extends the single meter accuracy of the deployed GNSS units into the water column.

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