Title :
Safely conducting airport surface trajectory-based operations
Author :
Jones, Denise R. ; Prinzel, Lawrence J. ; Bailey, Randall E. ; Arthur, Jarvis J. ; Barnes, James R.
Author_Institution :
Nat. Aeronaut. & Space Adm., Hampton, VA, USA
Abstract :
A piloted simulation study was conducted at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Langley Research Center (LaRC) to evaluate the ability to safely conduct surface trajectory-based operations (STBO) by assessing the impact of providing traffic intent information, conflict detection and resolution (CD&R) system capability, and the display of STBO guidance to the flight crew on both head-down and head-up displays (HUD). Nominal and off-nominal conflict scenarios were conducted using 12 airline crews operating in a simulated Memphis International Airport terminal environment. The flight crews met their required time-of-arrival at route end within 10 seconds on 98 percent of the trials, well within the acceptable performance bounds of 15 seconds. Traffic intent information was found to be useful in determining the intent of conflict traffic, with graphical presentation preferred. The CD&R system was only minimally effective during STBO because the prevailing visibility was sufficient for visual detection of incurring traffic. Overall, the pilots indicated STBO increased general situation awareness but also negatively impacted workload, reduced the ability to watch for other traffic, and increased head-down time.
Keywords :
aerospace simulation; air safety; air traffic; aircraft displays; airports; head-up displays; CD&R system capability; HUD; STBO; airline crews; conflict detection and resolution system capability; conflict traffic; graphical presentation; head-down displays; head-up displays; nominal conflict scenarios; off-nominal conflict scenarios; piloted simulation study; safely conducting airport surface trajectory-based operations; simulated Memphis International Airport terminal environment; situation awareness; time 10 s; traffic intent information; visual detection; Accuracy; Air traffic control; Aircraft; Airports; Atmospheric modeling; NASA; Phase frequency detector;
Conference_Titel :
Digital Avionics Systems Conference (DASC), 2014 IEEE/AIAA 33rd
Conference_Location :
Colorado Springs, CO
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-5002-7
DOI :
10.1109/DASC.2014.6979518