NED or "Compass" vs. ENU or "Math" Angles

For historical and common practice reasons, we use two different coordinate conventions in this manual: North-East-Down (NED) and East-North-Up (ENU). Sailors and pilots usually use a NED coordinate system, while mathematicians and some IMUs use an ENU coordinate system.

The Cerulean ROVL coordinate system is described below and essentially passes the East-North-Up coordinate frame used by the internal IMU through with no transformations. For convenience we sometimes call this the โ€œMathโ€ coordinate frame. In this coordinate frame, the yaw (heading) angle is zero when the vehicle X-axis points due east, and the angle increases as the vehicle rotates counterclockwise (i.e., turns to port).

Sailors prefer a North-East-Down coordinate frame compatible with ordinary compasses, with the heading (yaw) angle zero when the vehicle X-axis points north, and the angle increasing as the vehicle rotates clockwise (turns to starboard).

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