Definition
A self-contained navigation system that determines an aircraft's position, velocity, attitude, and heading by sensing its own motion through space. It uses ring laser gyros (or fiber-optic gyros) and accelerometers to detect every change in direction and speed from a known starting point, then continuously calculates where the aircraft is without needing any signal from outside the airplane.
Plain English
A system that figures out where the aircraft is, which way it is pointed, and how fast it is moving, purely by sensing its own movement. Once it knows where it started, it tracks every turn and acceleration to keep updating that picture, with no help from the ground or satellites.
Context Anchor
Seen in aircraft navigation, flight display, and maintenance discussions, especially during system setup before flight and when troubleshooting navigation or display faults.
Derivation
Inertial comes from the Latin iners, meaning inactive or resistant to change in motion — the same root as inertia. The system works because mass naturally resists changes in motion, and very precise sensors can measure that resistance to detect every acceleration and rotation.
Why Pilots Care
Delivers continuous navigation information when GPS or ground aids are unavailable, supporting autopilot, flight management, and safe long-range flight.
Intuition Check
Inertial does not mean the system is inactive or slow. Here it means the system uses sensed motion inside the aircraft rather than depending only on outside signals.
Example Sentence 1
Before pushback, the crew waited for the IRS to complete its alignment so the aircraft's position and heading would be accurate for departure.
Example Sentence 2
The IRS supplied accurate attitude information during the approach after the GPS signal was lost.