IRstuff,
You seem to be irritated with my question, well that was not my intention. This question is not so senseless as you might think.
Continuing from my previous post…
…
Now, give the XYZ axes system a rotational speed about say the Y-axis. If the changing angle of the Z-axis with the vertical is theta, the gravitational acceleration makes this angle with the Z-axis, and so what is left in Z-direction due to gravity is –g cos(theta).
My question is, what measures the accelerometer now?
It still measures –1g !
Why? Remember the XYZ axes system (to which the accelerometer is attached) has a force in negative Z-direction equaling the weight of the accelerometer. Because the Z-axis now makes an angle theta with the vertical, there is no force equilibrium in Z-direction any more. The XYZ axes system is accelerating with
- (1-cos(theta))*g
in Z-direction. This creates an extra mass force in Z direction:
accelerometermass*(1-cos(theta))*g
this adds on to the mass force
accelerometermass*cos(theta)*g
which comes from gravity.
Resulting in a total mass force of
accelerometer-mass * g,
And thus the accelerometer measures a 1g acceleration in negative Z-direction while the real motion has an acceleration in Z-direction of -(1-cos(theta))*g.
In other words only accelerometers are useless in measuring motion translational acceleration. You need more than that. You need a gyro to provide the direction of the gravitational field. Now you can solve the problem. The gyro provides theta, the accelerometer provides the acceleration of the total measured mass force, ... with theta gravity terms are filtered out from motion terms.
Accelerometers CANNOT be used to measure rotation.
I don’ t agree!
Yes , they can not be used to measure an angle of rotation, but they could perfectly be used to measure rotational acceleration. You can use 4 accelerometers in the XY-plane of the above mentioned XYZ-system to measure rotational acceleration about the Z-axis.
Say you have 2 of them mounted on the X-axis, one at –L, one at +L, both directed in +Y-direction. The other 2 are mounted on the Y-axis, also one at –L , one at +L, both directed in +X-direction.
The average of the sum of the average measured differences in X and Y accelerations gives you L * Z-rotational acceleration.
See, gyros are expensive and relatively high weight for certain applications, is it possible to only use accelerometers for stabilizing, maybe in combination with other lightweight devices? I am thinking of accelerometers + accelerometers on pendulum or so? Please don’t get irritated again, think about it, if you have a decent answer I would be glad to read it.
Ps: Is it a coincidence that you mentioned the V-2 bomb? Just happens to be that my grandfather was forced to work on the damn thing.