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Using VisSim, the Air Force Research Laboratory
(AFRL) at Eglin Air Force Base has developed a high-fidelity
6-degree-of-freedom (6-DOF) modeling system that simulates the flight
dynamics and performance of a state-of-the-art weapons system. The
modeling system was built under the Munition Simulation Tools and
Resources (MSTARS) project at AFRL by a joint government/ contractor
team led by Larry Lewis, Munition Flyout Team Leader.
Designed for the rapid prototyping of new guided
bomb and missile concepts, as well as the evaluation of new technology
performance, MSTARS includes a library of VisSim-based munitions
subsystems representing the accelerometer, rate gyro, autopilot, seeker,
inertial navigation system, control surfaces, and air vehicle, with
complete 6-DOF flight dynamics. Simplified models of a launch aircraft
and threat target are also incorporated into the component library.
Nearly 70 VisSim models and DLLs are currently in the library, and many
more are being added monthly. Several guided bomb and missile 6-DOF
simulations have been built using these components.
The current MSTARS system is the culmination of work
which began about a year ago when Lewis first created a prototype 6-DOF
simulation using VisSim. "We had been using another modeling system
which simply was not meeting our objectives. After doing a detailed
comparison of several outstanding products, my team decided to go with
VisSim for MSTARS. It was a scary prospect to re-do our previous work,
but we've accomplished more in one year than we had in the previous
three years."
According to Lewis, numerous VisSim features were
essential in building the 6-DOF system. "Embed blocks allowed us to
build a truly reusable library of components," said Lewis. "And path
aliases tied to the embed blocks let us specify a complete simulation
configuration, eliminating the use of lengthy file specifications."
Lewis emphasized that this modular approach to
system design not only saved valuable time during the design and
debugging phases, but also allowed engineers to quickly test the
effectiveness of new subsystem component designs. "Whenever we came up
with a new design, we just changed a single name to swap the new
component into the simulation."
Reuse
of legacy code written in Fortran and Ada was facilitated by VisSim's
DLL capability, as was the creation of new models and special utilities.
"This ability to reuse existing code and create special-purpose code via
DLLs shaved months off our development schedule," said Lewis. New DLLs
are constantly being added, written in C++, FORTRAN, and Ada 95.
In large model design, the dynamics of the system
generally demands multirate simulation. In the 6-DOF system, discrete
transfer functions, unit delays, and automatic DLLs were used to achieve
different update rates. "This allowed us to dramatically reduce
computation time and speed up the simulation," explained Lewis.
Within the Eglin AFB community, VisSim and the
MSTARS modeling system have received favorable reviews. Lewis plans to
present and demonstrate the VisSim-based MSTARS system at the Joint
Avionics, Weapons, and Systems Symposium in Las Vegas in June of this
year.
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