I'm developing an app that has to use very small changes in gyroscope data.
The problem is that while keeping the device flat on the table and accelerating it horizontally, CoreMotion seems to also perceive that linear acceleration as angular acceleration.
The pitch and roll values, coming directly from deviceMotion, change with a maximum amount of 3 degrees and come back to the default value while decelerating.
I would have expected only one angle (yaw) to change since you can rotate the device that way while keeping it horizontal.
It does not matter which reference attitude I use.
The same issue seems to affect the quaternion of deviceMotion.attitude. At first I thought this was an effect of the sensor fusion algorithm used in CoreMotion, but rotationRate coming from CMGyroData (which should be raw data) changes aswel.
Has anyone noticed this problem before?
Related
Using iOS Core Motion I am reading the GForce applied to a device, however if the device is not completely level then the readings are not as accurate.
Say I want the force applied on the Y axis but the phone is not 100% flat. Is there a calculation that can be done using the other axis to correct the figure account for the slight angle?
I'm new to Core Motion and I'm very confused. Can somebody please explain what these inputs measure and how they can be useful in simple terms?
Accelerometers measure movement relative to gravity, by virtue of "feeling" the force of movement applied to the device. Force of movement can be described as the rate of acceleration and deceleration of the device, hence the name of this sensor.
Gyroscopes measure changes in rotation by virtue of a suspended element reporting its rotation relative to the device. As the device rotates, this suspended element doesn't rotate, so there's a report coming from it that tells you how far the phone's rotated.
Magnetometers get their idea of rotational position from the north/south magnetic fields that compasses use to know where they are relative to the poles. This data is used (primarily) to help the Gyroscope, because these things suffer from float and inertia.
Combined, the information from these sensors, when filtered well (which Apple does for you with CoreMotion) give you all the movement of a phone.
So you can know if the user is swinging the phone around like a table tennis bat, or steering like a Wii Remote Mario style game controller, or simply walking.
We have XSENS MTi IMU-Device and use the ROS-Framework (Ubuntu / Fuerte).
We subscribe to the IMU-Data and all data looks good except orientation.
In Euler-Outputmode like in Quaternion-Outputmode the values are constantly changing. Not randomly, they increase or decrease slowly at a more or less constant rate, and sometimes I observed the change to flatten out and then change it's direction.
When the Value at Second X may be:
x: 7.79210457616
y: -6.58661204898
z: 41.2841955308
the Z value changes in a range of about 10 within a few seconds (10-20 seconds I think).
What can cause this behaviour? Do we misinterpret the data or is there something wrong with the driver? The strange thing is, this also happend with 2 other drivers, and one other IMU device (we have 2). Same results in each combination.
Feel free to ask for more precise data or whatever you'd like to know that may be able to help us out. We are participating at the Spacebot-Cup in November, so it would be quite a relief to get the IMU done. :)
Perfectly normal if you have no magnetometer to give a corrected heading.
Gyroscope alone measures rate of turn only, and has no idea of orientation at any given time on any axis. Integrating the rate of turn gives the heading if you know the initial heading and the gyro is 100% accurate. It drifts anyway, even if it's perfectly calibrated, as you are sampling at discrete intervals rather than continuously.
Adding an accelerometer will at least fix the downward direction (because it measures gravity, which is towards the Earth's centre). This will keep the Z axis solution aligned with vertical, but it won't fix the horizontal direction (the heading or yaw). That will continue to drift, as you are seeing.
Adding a magnetometer will fix the heading relative to the Earth's magnetic field. This will give you a heading relative to magnetic North. You will need to apply a shift for local magnetic declination to get True North. These are generally available on line and reasonably constant over tens of km. Google ITREF.
Some integrated sensors don't have a magnetometer. That's why the heading drifts. Units like the MPU6050 have firmware built in, and can access a magnetometer, but the usual firmware doesn't use it, so you have to implement Madgwick, etc., on your micro controller or a connected PC anyway. Bosch have a new single module with a processing unit built in. Hopefully, it uses 9 DOF rather than the 6 you get with the DMP on the MPU6050.
Magnetic sensors are accurate to about 2 degrees. Local magnetic declination corrections also have an error. You may be able to perform additional calibrations by using a GPS on a long base line to get better results. It's also worth noting that heading and course made good are often different, due to crosswind / cross currents.
The Madgwick algorithm is fairly stable and easy to implement, and uses fewer resources than a Kalman filter, which needs to perform matrix inversion. It still gives minor jitter, but minor smoothing of results shouldn't induce too much lag.
If you have the IMU version, I assume that no signal processing has been done on the device. (but I don't know the product). So the data you get for the orientation should be only the integral of the gyroscope data.
The drift you can see is normal and can come from the integration of the noise, a bad zero rate calibration, or the bias of the gyroscope.
To correct this drift, we usually use an AHRS or a VRU algorithm (depending the need of a corrected yaw). It's a fusion sensor algorithm which take the gravity from the accelerometer and the magnetometer data (for AHRS) to correct this drift.
The algorithms often used are the Kalman filter and the complementary filter (Madgwick/Mahony).
It's not an easy job and request a bit of reading and experimenting on matlab/python to configure these filters :)
I'm currently developing an iPhone App (on iPhone 5, iOS 7, Xcode 5) which requires a very accurate determination of the current attitude. The "attitude" of CMDeviceMotion does not fulfil these requirements because Apple's sensor fusion algorithm seems to rely too much on the gyroscope which drifts away rather fast (in my experience). That's why I decided to read out the bare sensor data and later I want to combine it within a sensor fusion algorithm by myself.
When asking for magnetometer data one has two possibilities:
via CMMagnetometerData in CMMotionManager
via CMCalibratedMagneticField in CMDeviceMotion about which Apple says
The CMCalibratedMagneticField returned by this property gives you the total magnetic field in the device’s vicinity without device bias. Unlike the magneticField property of the CMMagnetometer class, these values reflect the earth’s magnetic field plus surrounding fields, minus device bias.
In principle (2.) is exactly what I want.
There is a very simple test if magnetometer data is calibrated properly. For simplicity one can restrict oneself to two dimensions. When the device lies on it's back, the combination B_x^2 + B_y^2 must be constant, independent of the direction the device is pointing to. It must just equal the horizontal component of the Earth's magnetic field (assuming no other fields in the vicinity of the device). Thus, when performing a 360 degrees turn of the device which lies on it's back, the measured data B_y over B_x should display a circle. See here for details.
Now the point: the data of CMCalibratedMagneticField does NOT result in a circle!
Does anyone have an explanation for that? Or does anyone know, how the CMCalibratedMagneticField comes about? Is the magnetometer calibrated in the sense of the link from above when performing the "eight-shaped" movement of the device or what is the movement good for?
Btw. why the "eight-shaped" movement and not flipping the device around it's three axis, which would allow a calibration as described in the link from above?
I would be very glad for any clarification with this issue... Thanks!
There is a problem with the magnetometer in iOS 7, it has an error of +-7º. Try using the 7.1 beta version.
EDIT
The magnetometer has zero-drift over time, but is pretty inaccurate for sudden changes in position. The accelerometer and gyroscope on the other hand adjust quickly for sudden changes but, being inertial sensors, they lose accuracy over a period of time.
So when CMCalibratedMagneticField tries compensate for your rotational motion it uses data from the gyroscope and accelerometer. This is when the accelerometer and gyroscope's +-7º error creeps in and throws your circle off track. Check this answer and this wikipedia article for more info.
As regards to the figure of eight:
Both do the same thing, they orient the "North" of your device in each direction in hope of cancelling out magnetic interference. Flipping your device along all three axes will work better but it is harder to perform and not as easily understood by the user.
Hope this helps.
I'm seeing some unexpected readings from the userAcceleration field in CMDeviceMotion. When I look at the raw accelerometer data from CMAccelerometerData, I see that if the iPhone is flat on a table the reading is 1G straight down (1G in -Z axis) and if I drop the iphone (on a soft surface of course) then the acceleromtere reading goes to zero as expected. That's all fine. When I instead use the CMDeviceMotion class, the userAcceleration reading is zero as expected when the iPhone is flat on table. Again this is fine. But when I drop the iPhone and read the CMDeviceManager userAcceleration, the userAcceleration values are 1G straight up (+Z) not down (-Z) as expected. It appears that the userAcceleration readings are actually the exact opposite of what acceleration the device is really experiencing. Has anyone else observed this? Can I just invert (multiply by -1) all the userAcceleration values before I try to integrate for velocity and position, or am I misunerstanding what userAcceleration is reading?
There are some conceptual differences between CMAccelerometerData.acceleration and CMDeviceMotion.userAcceleration
Raw accelerometer data is just the sum of all accelerations measured i.e. a combination of gravity and current acceleration of the device.
Device motion data is the result of sensor fusion of all 3 sensors i.e. accelerometer, gyroscope and magnetometer. Thus bias and errors are eliminated (in theory) and the remaining acceleration data is separated into gravity and acceleration to be used conveniently.
So if you want to compare both you have to check CMAccelerometerData.acceleration against CMDeviceMotion.userAcceleration + CMDeviceMotion.gravity to compare like with like.
In general CMDeviceMotion is your first choice in most cases when you want precise values and hardware independency.
Another thing to consider is the CMAttitudeReferenceFrame you provide when starting Device Motion updates via startDeviceMotionUpdatesUsingReferenceFrame. I am not sure what is the default when using the basic version startDeviceMotionUpdates
You stated that you want to integrate the values to get velocity and position. There are several discussions about this and at the bottom line I can say it's impossible to get reasonable results. See:
Finding distance using accelerometer in iPhone
Getting displacement from accelerometer data with Core Motion
How can I find distance traveled with a gyroscope and accelerometer?
If your app concept forces you to rely on precise results for more than half a second, try to change it.
It turns out the CMAcceleration is not obey the right hand rule, which x is point to left, y is point to the screen bottom, in that case, with a typical right hand system, z axis should point to the upper side,but its not.
It makes me uncomfortable when dealing with motion sensors!