DocumentCode
2328378
Title
The effects of limited intent information availability on self-separation in mixed operations
Author
Lewis, T.A. ; Phojanamongkolkij, N. ; Wing, D.J.
Author_Institution
NASA Langley Res. Center, Hampton, VA, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
24-26 April 2012
Abstract
This paper presents the results of a computer simulation of the NASA Autonomous Flight Rules (AFR) concept for airborne self-separation in airspace shared with conventional Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) traffic. This study was designed to determine the impact of varying levels of intent information from IFR aircraft on the performance of AFR conflict detection and resolution. The study used Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) to supply IFR intent, but other methods such as an uplink from a ground-based System Wide Information Management (SWIM) network could alternatively supply this information. The independent variables of the study consist of the number of ADS-B trajectory change reports broadcast by IFR aircraft and the time interval between those reports. The conflict detection and resolution metrics include: the number of conflicts and losses of separation, the average conflict warning time, and the amount of time spent in strategic vs. tactical flight modes (i.e., whether the autoflight system was decoupled from the planned route in the Flight Management System in order to respond to a short-notice traffic conflict). The results show a measurable benefit of broadcasting IFR intent vs. relying on state-only broadcasts. The results of this study will inform ongoing separation assurance research and FAA NextGen design decisions for the sharing of trajectory intent information in the National Airspace System.
Keywords
air traffic; aircraft communication; aircraft instrumentation; ADS-B trajectory; FAA NextGen design decisions; IFR aircraft; NASA autonomous flight rules; National Airspace System; airborne self-separation; airspace sharing; automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast; conflict detection; conflict warning time; flight management system; instrument flight rules traffic; limited intent information availability; mixed operations; resolution metrics; separation assurance research; short-notice traffic conflict; system wide information management network; trajectory intent information; Air traffic control; Aircraft; Atmospheric modeling; Availability; NASA; Trajectory; Vectors;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Integrated Communications, Navigation and Surveillance Conference (ICNS), 2012
Conference_Location
Herndon, VA
ISSN
2155-4943
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1901-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICNSurv.2012.6218383
Filename
6218383
Link To Document