This paper introduces a novel architecture for a navigation system that is designed to estimate the position and velocity of a moving vehicle specifically for remote piloting scenarios where GPS availability is intermittent and can be lost for extended periods of time. The purpose of the navigation system is to keep velocity estimation as reliable as possible to allow the vehicle guidance and control systems to maintain close-to-nominal performance. The cornerstone of this system is a landmark-extraction algorithm, which identifies pertinent features within the environment. These features serve as landmarks, enabling continuous and precise adjustments to the vehicle’s estimated velocity. State estimations are performed by a Sequential Kalman filter, which processes camera data regarding the vehicle’s relative position to the identified landmarks. Tracking the landmarks supports a state-of-the-art LiDAR odometry segment and keeps the velocity error low. During an extensive testing phase, the system’s performance was evaluated across various real word trajectories. These tests were designed to assess the system’s capability in maintaining stable velocity estimation under different conditions. The results from these evaluations indicate that the system effectively estimates velocity, demonstrating the feasibility of its application in scenarios where GPS signals are compromised or entirely absent.
Vision-Aided Velocity Estimation in GNSS Degraded or Denied Environments
Pierpaolo Serio;Andrea Dan Ryals;Francesca Piana;Lorenzo Pollini
2026-01-01
Abstract
This paper introduces a novel architecture for a navigation system that is designed to estimate the position and velocity of a moving vehicle specifically for remote piloting scenarios where GPS availability is intermittent and can be lost for extended periods of time. The purpose of the navigation system is to keep velocity estimation as reliable as possible to allow the vehicle guidance and control systems to maintain close-to-nominal performance. The cornerstone of this system is a landmark-extraction algorithm, which identifies pertinent features within the environment. These features serve as landmarks, enabling continuous and precise adjustments to the vehicle’s estimated velocity. State estimations are performed by a Sequential Kalman filter, which processes camera data regarding the vehicle’s relative position to the identified landmarks. Tracking the landmarks supports a state-of-the-art LiDAR odometry segment and keeps the velocity error low. During an extensive testing phase, the system’s performance was evaluated across various real word trajectories. These tests were designed to assess the system’s capability in maintaining stable velocity estimation under different conditions. The results from these evaluations indicate that the system effectively estimates velocity, demonstrating the feasibility of its application in scenarios where GPS signals are compromised or entirely absent.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


