Technology-enabled airborne spacing and merging

J. Hull, B. Barmore, T. Abbott
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Over the last several decades, advances in airborne and groundside technologies have allowed the air traffic service provider (ATSP) to give safer and more efficient service, reduce workload and frequency congestion, and help accommodate a critically escalating traffic volume. These new technologies have included advanced radar displays, and data and communication automation to name a few. In step with such advances, NASA Langley is developing a precision spacing concept designed to increase runway throughput by enabling the flight crews to manage their inter-arrival spacing from TRACON entry to the runway threshold. This concept is being developed as part of NASA's distributed air/ground traffic management (DAG-TM) project under the Advanced Air Transportation Technologies Program. Precision spacing is enabled by automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B), which provides air-to-air data exchange including position and velocity reports; real-time wind information and other necessary data. On the flight deck, a research prototype system called airborne merging and spacing for terminal arrivals (AMSTAR) processes this information and provides speed guidance to the flight crew to achieve the desired inter-arrival spacing. AMSTAR is designed to support current ATC operations, provide operationally acceptable system-wide increases in approach spacing performance and increase runway throughput through system stability, predictability and precision spacing. This paper describes problems and costs associated with an imprecise arrival flow. It also discusses methods by which air traffic controllers achieve and maintain an optimum inter-arrival interval, and explores means by which AMSTAR can assist in this pursuit. AMSTAR is an extension of NASA's previous work on in-trail spacing that was successfully demonstrated in a flight evaluation at Chicago O'Hare International Airport in September 2002. In addition to providing for precision inter-arrival spacing, AMSTAR provides speed guidance for aircraft on converging routes to safely and smoothly merge onto a common approach. Much consideration has been given to working with operational conditions such as imperfect ADS-B data, wind prediction errors, changing winds, differing aircraft types and wake vortex separation requirements. A series of Monte Carlo simulations are planned for the spring and summer of 2004 at NASA Langley to further study the system behavior and performance under more operationally extreme and varying conditions. This coincides with a human-in-the-loop study to investigate the flight crew interface, workload and acceptability.
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技术支持的机载间距和合并
在过去的几十年里,空中和地面技术的进步使空中交通服务提供商(ATSP)能够提供更安全、更高效的服务,减少工作量和频率拥堵,并帮助适应急剧上升的交通量。这些新技术包括先进的雷达显示、数据和通信自动化等等。与这些进步同步,NASA Langley正在开发一种精确间隔概念,旨在通过使飞行机组能够管理从TRACON进入到跑道阈值的到达间隔来提高跑道吞吐量。这一概念是NASA先进航空运输技术计划下分布式空中/地面交通管理(DAG-TM)项目的一部分。精确间隔通过自动相关监视广播(ADS-B)实现,该系统提供空对空数据交换,包括位置和速度报告;实时风力信息及其他必要数据。在飞行甲板上,一个名为终端到达的机载合并和间隔(AMSTAR)的研究原型系统处理这些信息,并为机组人员提供速度指导,以实现期望的到达间隔。AMSTAR旨在支持当前的ATC操作,提供可接受的全系统进近间距性能,并通过系统稳定性、可预测性和精确间距提高跑道吞吐量。本文描述了与不精确的到达流相关的问题和成本。它还讨论了空中交通管制员实现和保持最佳到达间隔的方法,并探讨了AMSTAR可以帮助实现这一目标的方法。AMSTAR是NASA先前在跟踪间距方面的工作的延伸,该工作于2002年9月在芝加哥奥黑尔国际机场的一次飞行评估中成功演示。除了提供精确的到达间隔外,AMSTAR还为会聚航线上的飞机提供速度指导,使其安全、平稳地合并到一个共同的方法上。考虑了ADS-B数据不完善、风预报误差、风向变化、不同飞机类型和尾流分离要求等操作条件。一系列蒙特卡罗模拟计划于2004年春夏在NASA兰利进行,以进一步研究系统在更极端和变化条件下的行为和性能。与此同时,一项“人在循环”的研究正在调查机组人员的界面、工作量和可接受性。
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