General principle
See wikipedia for general info.
The IMU captures attitude of the aircraft in real time, about 20x (200x?) a second.
- there is some variable error in this measurement, particularly if the IMU isn't shaken up regularly
The GPS receiver records signals from the visible GPS satellites, allowing a position fix approximately every second (?)
- there is inherent error in this measurement, due to atmospheric conditions, etc delaying the signal from the satellites
In postprocessing, the position information is normally combined with a fixed ground station to remove/reduce local error. Position fixes are still once every second or so.
Following this, the IMU and GPS information are combined to produce an SBET (Smoothed Best Estimate of Trajectory) file, which uses the IMU information to interpolate a predicted best path through the GPS position samples. This path will not necessarily be the true path. The SBET contains the interpolated navigation at high resolution and has inextricably mixed the GPS and IMU information.
ARSF specifics
IMU model used in Leica's IPAS system on the ARSF plane: Honeywell micro IRS (uIRS).
IMU model used in Applanix navigation system (non LIDAR instruments): ?