Title :
Future demand for air traffic services
Author :
Ashby, Wallace L.
Author_Institution :
Federal Aviation Administration, Washington, D. C.
fDate :
3/1/1970 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Forecasts of the demand for air transportation indicate continued growth in that demand throughout the next 25 years. This paper translates those demand forecasts into measures of air traffic activity--flights, airport operations, and numbers of aircraft airborne at peak periods. Total air traffic activity in this country is projected to increase four-fold between 1968 and 1995. Most aircraft flying in the 1990´s are expected to be provided some sort of control service; to serve these users, the capacity of the en route instrument flight-rules system may need to be increased by a factor of about eight. Providing air traffic control services to local and itinerant flights operating to and from all airports within approximately a 30-mile radius of a major terminal might increase tower (or computer) control loads to 10 or 15 times today´s peaks.
Keywords :
Aerospace control; Air traffic control; Air transportation; Airports; Demand forecasting; Economic forecasting; FAA; Military aircraft; Poles and towers; Traffic control;
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/PROC.1970.7631