• DocumentCode
    1562892
  • Title

    Airborne Precision Spacing: A Trajectory-Based Aprroach to Improve Terminal Area Operations

  • Author

    Barmore, Bryan

  • Author_Institution
    NASA Langley Res. Center, Hampton, VA
  • fYear
    2006
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    12
  • Abstract
    Airborne precision spacing has been developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) over the past seven years as an attempt to benefit from the capabilities of the flight deck to precisely space their aircraft relative to another aircraft. This development has leveraged decades of work on improving terminal area operations, especially the arrival phase. With APS operations, the air traffic controller instructs the participating aircraft to achieve an assigned inter-arrival spacing interval at the runway threshold, relative to another aircraft. The flight crew then uses airborne automation to manage the aircraft´s speed to achieve the goal. The spacing tool is designed to keep the speed within acceptable operational limits, promote system-wide stability, and meet the assigned goal. This reallocation of tasks with the controller issuing strategic goals and the flight crew managing the tactical achievement of those goals has been shown to be feasible through simulation and flight test. A precision of plusmn2-3 seconds is generally achievable. Simulations of long strings of arriving traffic show no signs of instabilities or compression waves. Subject pilots have rated the workload to be similar to current-day operations and eye-tracking data substantiate this result. This paper will present a high-level review of research results over the past seven years from a variety of tests and experiments. The results will focus on the precision and accuracy achievable, flow stability and some major sources of uncertainty. The paper also includes a summary of the flight crew´s procedures and interface and a brief concept overview
  • Keywords
    air traffic control; aircraft testing; automation; air traffic controller; airborne automation; airborne precision spacing; compression waves; eye-tracking data; flight deck; flight test; flow stability; runway threshold; terminal area operations; Aerospace control; Aerospace simulation; Air traffic control; Aircraft; Automatic control; Automation; NASA; Stability; Testing; Traffic control;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    25th Digital Avionics Systems Conference, 2006 IEEE/AIAA
  • Conference_Location
    Portland, OR
  • Print_ISBN
    1-4244-0377-4
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1-4244-0378-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/DASC.2006.313683
  • Filename
    4106260