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Kalman filter : ウィキペディア英語版
Kalman filter

Kalman filtering, also known as linear quadratic estimation (LQE), is an algorithm that uses a series of measurements observed over time, containing statistical noise and other inaccuracies, and produces estimates of unknown variables that tend to be more precise than those based on a single measurement alone. The filter is named after Rudolf E. Kálmán, one of the primary developers of its theory.
The Kalman filter has numerous applications in technology. A common application is for guidance, navigation and control of vehicles, particularly aircraft and spacecraft. Furthermore, the Kalman filter is a widely applied concept in time series analysis used in fields such as signal processing and econometrics. Kalman filters also are one of the main topics in the field of robotic motion planning and control, and they are sometimes included in trajectory optimization.
The algorithm works in a two-step process. In the prediction step, the Kalman filter produces estimates of the current state variables, along with their uncertainties. Once the outcome of the next measurement (necessarily corrupted with some amount of error, including random noise) is observed, these estimates are updated using a weighted average, with more weight being given to estimates with higher certainty. The algorithm is recursive. It can run in real time, using only the present input measurements and the previously calculated state and its uncertainty matrix; no additional past information is required.
The Kalman filter does not require any assumption that the errors are Gaussian. However, the filter yields the exact conditional probability estimate in the special case that all errors are Gaussian-distributed.
Extensions and generalizations to the method have also been developed, such as the extended Kalman filter and the unscented Kalman filter which work on nonlinear systems. The underlying model is a Bayesian model similar to a hidden Markov model but where the state space of the latent variables is continuous and where all latent and observed variables have Gaussian distributions.
== Naming and historical development ==

The filter is named after Hungarian émigré Rudolf E. Kálmán, although Thorvald Nicolai Thiele〔(Steffen L. Lauritzen ). "Time series analysis in 1880. A discussion of contributions made by T.N. Thiele". ''International Statistical Review'' 49, 1981, 319–333. 〕〔Steffen L. Lauritzen, ''(Thiele: Pioneer in Statistics )'', Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-19-850972-3.〕 and Peter Swerling developed a similar algorithm earlier. Richard S. Bucy of the University of Southern California contributed to the theory, leading to it often being called the Kalman–Bucy filter.
Stanley F. Schmidt is generally credited with developing the first implementation of a Kalman filter. He realized that the filter could be divided into two distinct parts, with one part for time periods between sensor outputs and another part for incorporating measurements.〔(Mohinder S. Grewal and Angus P. Andrews )〕 It was during a visit by Kálmán to the NASA Ames Research Center that he saw the applicability of his ideas to the problem of trajectory estimation for the Apollo program, leading to its incorporation in the Apollo navigation computer.
This Kalman filter was first described and partially developed in technical papers by Swerling (1958), Kalman (1960) and Kalman and Bucy (1961).
Kalman filters have been vital in the implementation of the navigation systems of U.S. Navy nuclear ballistic missile submarines, and in the guidance and navigation systems of cruise missiles such as the U.S. Navy's Tomahawk missile and the U.S. Air Force's Air Launched Cruise Missile. It is also used in the guidance and navigation systems of the NASA Space Shuttle and the attitude control and navigation systems of the International Space Station.
This digital filter is sometimes called the ''Stratonovich–Kalman–Bucy filter'' because it is a special case of a more general, non-linear filter developed somewhat earlier by the Soviet mathematician Ruslan Stratonovich.〔Stratonovich, R. L. (1959). ''Optimum nonlinear systems which bring about a separation of a signal with constant parameters from noise''. Radiofizika, 2:6, pp. 892–901.〕〔Stratonovich, R. L. (1959). ''On the theory of optimal non-linear filtering of random functions''. Theory of Probability and its Applications, 4, pp. 223–225.〕〔Stratonovich, R. L. (1960) ''Application of the Markov processes theory to optimal filtering''. Radio Engineering and Electronic Physics, 5:11, pp. 1–19.〕〔Stratonovich, R. L. (1960). ''Conditional Markov Processes''. Theory of Probability and its Applications, 5, pp. 156–178.〕 In fact, some of the special case linear filter's equations appeared in these papers by Stratonovich that were published before summer 1960, when Kalman met with Stratonovich during a conference in Moscow.

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