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I want to know current speed of car and make a passed path. I have an Android phone with accelerometer and gyroscope which sent me data. This is the data in phone system of coordinate that probably wouldn't the same as coordiante system of car.

How I can transform this accelerations and rotations to car system of coordinate?

4 Answers 4

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The generic answer for your generic question is no. The acceleration measures the changes in the speed, so the best you could get from acceleration, is the speed variation.

To get the absolute speed you would have to have the initial speed and add it to the speed change:

v(t) = v0 + a*t

So, if you would have a car moving along a straight line, and your device was fixed to the car, you could get easly the speed changes (although measurements errors will add up and quickly lead to discrepancies)

In practice you will face many issues trying to implement it, namely:

  • You need the initial speed to be determinate based on the same referential as the acceleration. This would require some measurements and a lot of trignometry, as you would get both values from different sensores at different rates.
  • The car will not move in a straight line, so your acceleration referential will be constantly moving (a lot more of trignometry and calculus).
  • If the device is in the user hand, the device movements in relation to the car will increase even more the calculations (and accumulated errors).

Regards.

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    The biggest issue is that you are integrating the acceleration and the integration error will grow indefinitely. The error gets out of control really quick. So all in all, you cannot do it.
    – Ali
    Nov 8, 2012 at 12:10
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Both dont deliver anything if the car travels at the same constant speed for some time. The only way would be GPS which has a calculated speed with every location it provides.

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You need some sort of external reference (e.g. GPS is such a thing): If you just integrate the acceleration, the error will go indefinitely.

Because these sensors are not accurate enough. the error will quickly get out of control. (The linked answer is about position but the same holds for the velocity.)

In case of a car, you are better off with the GPS. If want to do something fancy, you could enforce the environmental constraints deduced from a map, that is, assume that the car goes on a road and not through buildings, etc. You will find more details on this in Chapter 5 of the PhD thesis entitled Pedestrian Localisation for Indoor Environments.

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It looks like it's possible to do. I don't have an Android specific example but this forum has quite a lot of chat about it: http://www.edaboard.com/thread119232.html

It would be a lot easier if you used the Android Location class though. Specifically the getSpeed() method should give you what you need: http://developer.android.com/reference/android/location/Location.html

The Location class relies on a location provider though so your app will require appropriate permissions.

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    The original request was about using accelerometer/gyroscope devices to estimate speed. The getSpeed( ) Android API is not related to those devices only. So I thing your answer is out of scope.
    – LM.Croisez
    Apr 30, 2015 at 11:12

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