Definition
A self-contained navigation system that determines an aircraft's position, velocity, and attitude by continuously measuring its own acceleration in three dimensions, starting from a known initial position. It uses gyroscopes and accelerometers to track movement without relying on any external signals such as ground stations, satellites, or radio aids.
Plain English
A navigation system that works on its own. Once you tell it where you are at the start, it keeps track of where you go by sensing every acceleration and turn. It needs no signals from outside the aircraft.
Context Anchor
Seen in aircraft navigation, instrument flight, long-range flight, and avionics discussions where the aircraft’s position must be tracked continuously.
Derivation
Inertial comes from the Latin iners, meaning inactive or resisting motion — the same root as inertia. The system works by sensing the forces that act on a mass when the aircraft accelerates or turns. It is, in effect, navigation by measured inertia.
Why Pilots Care
It allows precise navigation even when GPS is unavailable or jammed, serving as a reliable backup for long flights over remote areas.
Intuition Check
An INS is not the same as satellite navigation. It does not receive its position from outside; it calculates position from the aircraft’s measured movement.
Example Sentence 1
After programming the departure position into the INS at the gate, the crew used it as the primary navigation source for the oceanic crossing.
Example Sentence 2
Before takeoff, the crew initialized the INS with the current coordinates to ensure accurate tracking throughout the flight.