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Horizons Newsletter
Cranium Cruncher
Volume 29 Number 7 May / June 2004

Cranium Cruncher

by Douglas Yazell, ViceChair-Technical

Norman Chaffee/NASA (retired) continued a tradition of publishing a monthly puzzle in Horizons, and the names of the people who sent him the correct answers were published. Sophia Bright/Boeing suggested that our section's technical branch committees continue the tradition. Please send your answers to me at douglas.yazell@honeywell.com or phone me (for hints or discussion or to deliver an answer) at 281-244-3925. I am submitting this one as a member of our section's Guidance, Navigation, and Control technical committee, which is chaired by Ellen Gillespie/USA. Like all of our committees in the technical branch of our section, we are always looking for new members: students, young professionals, experts, etc. We don't impose much on our members' time, but there are many potential benefits. Other members on the GN&C TC are: Daniel Nobles (Oceaneering), George Platanitis (Texas A&M, recent PhD graduate in aerospace engineering), Jeff Tave (Lockheed Martin), Ron Sostaric (NASA), and Murugan Subramaniam (Dynacs).

"Given an aircraft's velocity vector's coordinates in two coordinate systems with the same origin, can we find the orientation between the two coordinate systems? Is it unique? If not, describe all solutions."

Hints:

  1. This can be solved for full credit with no equations, using words like circles, cones, lines, axes, coordinate systems, etc.
  2. There is more than one solution.

Applications and background:

One of many applications is a flight control system design engineer who has a trim case (equilibrium among the rotational forces on the vehicle) for a new vehicle's flight simulation, where the velocity vector is horizontal and due north in the North, East, Down coordinate system. Having trimmed the vehicle, the same vector is known in the body-fixed coordinate system. New trim cases for simulation can be created easily if the direction cosine matrix (describing the orientation between the two coordinate systems) is known. For example, the velocity vector could point due east and horizontal.

Thanks are already due to Murugan Subramaniam. I created this puzzle (creativity: the art of concealing one's sources), and he helped me to find and visualize a complete solution. Thanks also go to Guillaume Francois (Awty International School), a French ninth grade student who visited our office for a week as part of his school's curriculum. He and others listened and helped in other ways.

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