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Advanced Control Algorithms for Compensating the Phase Distortion Due to Transport Delay in Human-Machine SystemsThe desire to create more complex visual scenes in modern flight simulators outpaces recent increases in processor speed. As a result, simulation transport delay remains a problem. New approaches for compensating the transport delay in a flight simulator have been developed and are presented in this report. The lead/lag filter, the McFarland compensator and the Sobiski/Cardullo state space filter are three prominent compensators. The lead/lag filter provides some phase lead, while introducing significant gain distortion in the same frequency interval. The McFarland predictor can compensate for much longer delay and cause smaller gain error in low frequencies than the lead/lag filter, but the gain distortion beyond the design frequency interval is still significant, and it also causes large spikes in prediction. Though, theoretically, the Sobiski/Cardullo predictor, a state space filter, can compensate the longest delay with the least gain distortion among the three, it has remained in laboratory use due to several limitations. The first novel compensator is an adaptive predictor that makes use of the Kalman filter algorithm in a unique manner. In this manner the predictor can accurately provide the desired amount of prediction, while significantly reducing the large spikes caused by the McFarland predictor. Among several simplified online adaptive predictors, this report illustrates mathematically why the stochastic approximation algorithm achieves the best compensation results. A second novel approach employed a reference aircraft dynamics model to implement a state space predictor on a flight simulator. The practical implementation formed the filter state vector from the operator s control input and the aircraft states. The relationship between the reference model and the compensator performance was investigated in great detail, and the best performing reference model was selected for implementation in the final tests. Theoretical analyses of data from offline simulations with time delay compensation show that both novel predictors effectively suppress the large spikes caused by the McFarland compensator. The phase errors of the three predictors are not significant. The adaptive predictor yields greater gain errors than the McFarland predictor for short delays (96 and 138 ms), but shows smaller errors for long delays (186 and 282 ms). The advantage of the adaptive predictor becomes more obvious for a longer time delay. Conversely, the state space predictor results in substantially smaller gain error than the other two predictors for all four delay cases.
Document ID
20080008837
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Guo, Liwen
(State Univ. of New York Binghamton, NY, United States)
Cardullo, Frank M.
(State Univ. of New York Binghamton, NY, United States)
Kelly, Lon C.
(Unisys Corp. Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 2007
Subject Category
Man/System Technology And Life Support
Report/Patent Number
NASA/CR-2007-215095
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 160961.01.01.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNL06AA74T
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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