Title :
AWARE: Technologies for interpreting and presenting aviation weather information
Author :
Uckun, S. ; Ruokangas, Corinne ; Donohue, Patick ; Tuvi, Selim
Author_Institution :
Rockwell Sci. Center, Palo Alto, CA, USA
Abstract :
NASA recently initiated a large multi-year program to develop technologies that will reduce aviation accidents and fatalities attributable to weather. Weather is a substantial contributor to many general aviation (GA) accidents. A large percentage of GA accidents are caused by non-instrument-rated pilots inadvertently flying into instrument meteorological conditions (IMC), or instrument-rated pilots flying into catastrophic weather conditions such as thunderstorms, severe downdrafts, and low-level windshear. A team led by Rockwell Science Center is working on a project to facilitate weather awareness for the GA pilot. AWARE is an enhanced weather briefing and reporting tool that integrates text-based and graphical aviation weather data for superior situational awareness in the context of a mission and equipment profile. AWARE is designed to benefit GA pilots who, due to cognitive overload, may not absorb and retain all flight-critical weather information from a vast stream of data they are legally required to review
Keywords :
accidents; aerospace computing; aircraft control; avionics; meteorology; safety; traffic information systems; AWARE; NASA; Rockwell Science Center; aviation weather information; catastrophic weather conditions; cognitive overload; downdrafts; fatalities; flight-critical weather information; general aviation accidents; graphical aviation weather data; instrument meteorological conditions; low-level windshear; situational awareness; thunderstorms; Aerospace safety; Air accidents; Context awareness; Information systems; Instruments; Meteorology; NASA; Organizing; Paper technology; Space technology;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 1999. Proceedings. 1999 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Snowmass at Aspen, CO
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5425-7
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.1999.793187