The Apollo 'Primary Guidance, Navigation and Control System (PGNCS)' (pronounced ''pings'') was a self-contained
inertial guidance system that allowed
Apollo spacecraft to carry out their missions when communications with Earth were interrupted, either as expected, when the spacecraft were behind the moon, or in case of a communications failure. The Apollo
command module (CM) and
lunar module (LM), were each equipped with a version of PNGCS. The PNGCS, and specifically its computer were also the command center for all system inputs from the LEM, including the Kollsman Instrument built
Alignment Optical Telescope the radar system, the manual
Translation and Rotation device inputs by the astronauts as well as other inputs from the LEM systems.
PGNCS was developed by the
MIT Instrumentation Laboratory. The Prime Contractor of the PGNCS and manufacturer of the Inertial Measurement Unit, IMU was the
Delco Division of General Motors. Development was under the direction of
Charles Stark Draper and MIT Draper Labs and consisted of the following components:
★ an 'Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU)'
★ the
Apollo Guidance Computer
★ resolvers to convert inertial platform angles to signals usable for servo control
★ an optical unit
★ a mechanical frame, called the 'Navigation Base' (or Navbase), to rigidly connect the optical device and, in the LM, the rendezvous radar to the IMU
★ the AGC software
Versions
The CM and LM used the same computer, inertial platform and resolvers. The main difference was the optical unit.
The Navbase was different for each spacecraft as well, reflecting the differing mounting geometries. The LM's rendezvous
radar was also connected to its Navbase.
There were two versions of the PGNCS, 'Block I' and 'Block II', corresponding to the two generations of command module. After the
Apollo I fire, which occurred in a Block I CM,
NASA decided than no further manned missions would use Block I, though further unmanned missions did. Major differences between Block I and Block II PGNCS included replacing electromechanical resolvers with an all electronic design and replacing the Block I Navbase, which was machined from
beryllium, with a frame built out of
aluminum tubing filled with
polyurethane foam. The Block II Navbases were lighter, cheaper and just as rigid.
Components from PGNCS were used by Draper for the
U.S. Navy's
Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV).
Inertial Measurement Unit
The IMU was gimbaled on three axes. The innermost 'stable member', a 6
inch beryllium cube, had three
gyroscopes and three
accelerometers mounted in it. Feedback loops including the resolvers used signals from the gyroscopes to control motors at each axis. This
servo system kept the stable member fixed with respect to
Inertial Space . The IMU was derived from the guidance system developed by Draper for the
Polaris missile.
Inertial guidance systems are not perfect and Apollo system drifted about one
milliradian per hour. Thus it was necessary to ‘‘realign’’ the inertial platform periodically by sighting on stars.
Optical unit
The CM had a fixed
sextant the AOT, which could measure angles between stars, and Earth or Moon landmarks and planetary horizon. The unit included a scanning telescope for star sightings, and could be used to determine position and orientation in space. In contrast, the LM had an '
Alignment Optical Telescope', and could only determine the craft's orientation. The outer element of the AOT was a sun-shielded prism that could be rotated to one of three fixed positions relative to the LM, in order to cover a large portion of the lunar sky. When rotated, the AOT's position was readable by the AGC; by pointing the reticule at several different stars, the computer could determine the craft's orientation
[1].
Software
The onboard guidance software used a
Kalman filter to merge new data with past position measurements to produce an optimal position estimate for the spacecraft. The key information was a
coordinate transformation between the IMU stable member and the two reference coordinate systems, one centered on Earth and one centered on the Moon. In the argot of the Apollo program this matrix was known as '
REFSMMAT' (for "Reference to a Stable Member Matrix").
Who's in charge?
Despite the word "primary" in its name, PGNCS data was not the main source of navigation information. Tracking data from NASA’s
Deep Space Network was processed by computers at Mission Control, using
least squares algorithms. The position and velocity estimates that resulted were more accurate than those produced by the PGNCS. As a result, the astronauts were periodically given REFSMMAT updates to enter into the AGC, based on ground data. PGNCS was still essential to maintain spacecraft orientation, to control rockets during maneuvering burns, including lunar landing and take off, and as the prime source of navigation data during planned and unexpected communications outages. PGNCS also provided a check on ground data.
The lunar module had a third means of navigation, the Abort Guidance System (AGS), built by
TRW. This was to be used in the event of failure of the PGNCS. The AGS could be used to take off from the moon, and to rendezvous with the command module, but not for landing.