Monday, January 27, 2014

USAF asks NGC for another phase of MAGIC

NGC Awarded Follow-On Contract for USAF's GPS-Challenged Navigation an

Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC) has been awarded a phase three navigation system related contract from the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory to continue improving geo-registration accuracy for positioning and pointing applications, even in GPS-denied conditions.

In the first two phases of the Maintain Accurate Geo-registration via Image-nav Compensation (MAGIC) program, Northrop Grumman integrated geo-registration algorithms in a vision-aided inertial navigation system.

Modern airborne systems require accurate and reliable positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) information for a number of mission profiles, including targeting, surveillance, and reconnaissance. In particular, the ability to, in real-time, precisely navigate and to accurately geo-register imagery collected by the airborne platform is critical in information gathering scenarios and in communicating information between systems and users. Under the Air Force Research Laboratory, Sensors Directorate (AFRL/RY) Maintain Accurate Geo-Registration via Image-Nav Compensation (MAGIC) program, Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) and partner Toyon Research Corporation are designing and building a joint navigation/geo-registration system to advance the state-of-the-art in this area. The system is designed to fuse data from an inertial measurement unit (IMU), a passive electro-optical (EO) sensor, the Global Positioning System (GPS), as well as external global reference data (e.g. Digital Terrain Elevation Data (DTED)). In particular, the system makes no assumptions about the availability or quality of GPS and therefore can operate under GPS-denied, degraded GPS, or partial GPS constellation conditions. Additionally, advanced image processing enables the system to, in real-time, refine the sensor calibration models and external reference data in order to provide extremely accurate navigation and geo-registration results. 

Having successfully demonstrated a prototype system in phase one and prepared for flight tests in phase two, the company will continue to develop capabilities for incorporating 3-D maps, improving performance and quantifying uncertainties associated with image-based navigation in phase three, as well as conduct additional test flights to prove real-time performance in realistic environments.

Geo-registration of data is critical for accurate interaction between systems, such as locating targets and handing off coordinates to other aircraft. Geo-registration of images involves pairing  unreferenced images with the physical locations or exact coordinates of depicted items. This allows  aircraft to create accurate maps by stitching together photos and correlating them with their  world-based locations, which is useful for intelligence gathering and targeting.

"We continue to refine our new positioning and geo-registration solution to offer greater situational  awareness to warfighters, especially in GPS-denied situations," said Charles Volk, vice president, Advanced Navigation Systems business unit, Northrop Grumman.

Partnered with Toyon Research Corporation, Northrop Grumman is building on its experience in  vision-aided inertial navigation under past programs such as Collaborative Robust Integrated Sensor Positioning, which matched image features and processed visual motion estimations for precise navigation without relying on GPS.

The MAGIC program's objective is to develop and demonstrate advanced real-time geo-registration and navigation algorithms using a combination of cameras, an inertial measurement unit and any available GPS information. The program aims to capitalize on recent advances in the availability of low size, weight, power and cost camera systems that make the inclusion of camera information in navigation and geo-registration systems for airborne vehicles a significant opportunity.

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