DocumentCode
2533992
Title
Development and evaluation of the terminal precision scheduling and spacing system for off-nominal condition operations
Author
Swenson, H.N. ; Jaewoo Jung ; Thipphavong, J. ; Liang Chen ; Martin, Larry K. ; Nguyen, John
Author_Institution
NASA Ames Res. Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
14-18 Oct. 2012
Abstract
NASA has developed a capability for terminal area precision scheduling and spacing (TAPSS) to increase airport throughput and the use of fuel-efficient arrival procedures during periods of peak traffic congestion at high-throughput airports. This advanced technology represents NASA´s current concept for the NextGen terminal metering desired capability. A series of high-fidelity human-in-the-loop simulation experiments were conducted to evaluate the performance of the TAPSS system during off-nominal conditions, specifically aircraft executing missed-approach and go-around procedures after transitioning to the final approach fix during an attempted landing. Each simulation run contained 2-4 missed approaches during a highly congested 60-minute period. The TAPSS system was adapted to arrival operations for the Los Angeles International airport (LAX). It was also enhanced to support automated missed-approach processing and procedures. The experiments evaluated the utility of the missed approach enhanced automation features by comparing system performance and controller workload with and without the enhancements. The simulated traffic throughput exceeded that of the current LAX operations with two runways in instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) by 10%. The results showed that when using the enhanced automation, the controllers could maintain the higher throughput levels with more consistent and predictable routing in the final operations but with increased vectoring and off-route aircraft in the feeder positions. Controller workload results indicated a preference for the automation enhancement especially as the numbers of missed approaches increased from 2 to 4 during the 60-minute evaluation period.
Keywords
air traffic; airports; scheduling; IMC; LAX operations; Los Angeles International airport; NASA; NextGen terminal metering; TAPSS system; airport throughput; automation enhancement; feeder positions; fuel-efficient arrival procedures; high-fidelity human-in-the-loop simulation experiments; high-throughput airports; instrument meteorological conditions; off-nominal condition operations; off-nominal conditions; off-route aircraft; peak traffic congestion; spacing system; terminal area precision scheduling and spacing; terminal precision scheduling; traffic throughput; Air traffic control; Aircraft; Aircraft navigation; Airports; Atmospheric modeling; Automation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Digital Avionics Systems Conference (DASC), 2012 IEEE/AIAA 31st
Conference_Location
Williamsburg, VA
ISSN
2155-7195
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1699-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DASC.2012.6382303
Filename
6382303
Link To Document