Definition
A self-contained navigation system that determines an aircraft's position, velocity, and attitude by continuously measuring its accelerations and rotations using internal sensors (accelerometers and gyroscopes), then mathematically integrating those measurements from a known starting point. INS requires no external signals — no ground stations, no satellites, no radio aids — and provides continuous position information throughout the flight.
Plain English
A navigation system that figures out where the aircraft is by sensing every movement it makes from a known starting point, without needing any signals from outside the aircraft.
Context Anchor
Seen in area navigation and instrument flying discussions, especially when describing aircraft that can navigate along routes not tied directly to ground radio stations.
Derivation
From Latin 'inertia,' meaning 'inactivity' or 'resistance to change in motion.' The system relies on the physical principle of inertia — the tendency of a mass to resist acceleration — to detect how the aircraft is moving. Sensing those tiny resistances is how the system knows the aircraft has accelerated, turned, or climbed.
Why Pilots Care
It enables reliable navigation over oceans or remote areas where ground-based aids or GPS may be unavailable and serves as an independent backup system.
Analogy
It is like starting at a known point on a map and keeping a careful running total of every move you make: how far, how fast, and in what direction. If each measurement is a little off, the final position can slowly move away from the truth.
Intuition Check
Do not think of an INS as a receiver like a radio or GPS. It mainly works from sensed aircraft motion, starting from a known position.
Example Sentence 1
Before pushback, the crew entered the gate's known coordinates so the INS could align and establish its starting reference.
Example Sentence 2
Over the ocean, the crew relied on the INS to provide continuous position updates without external navigation aids.