DocumentCode
2567066
Title
Impact of missing longitudinal aircraft intent on descent trajectory prediction
Author
Bronsvoort, Jesper ; McDonald, Greg ; Paglione, Mike ; Garcia-Avello, Carlos ; Bayraktutar, Ibrahim ; Young, Christina M.
Author_Institution
Airservices Australia, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
fYear
2011
fDate
16-20 Oct. 2011
Abstract
Accurate trajectory prediction is the cornerstone for future Air Traffic Management (ATM) concepts worldwide. To this purpose, researchers from Airservices Australia, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and EUROCONTROL have collaborated on research into this important topic. Trajectory prediction is the process in which the future trajectory of an aircraft is computed based on a model of the aircraft´s performance, forecast meteorological conditions and aircraft intent: a script that indicates how the aircraft is operated to fulfill the user-intentions of the flight while satisfying imposed constraints. The lateral component of the trajectory is mostly defined by the flight plan and if the plan is kept up to date, lateral uncertainty should be minimal. Longitudinally however, the problem is more complicated since not all required longitudinal aircraft intent is known to the ground-based Trajectory Predictor (TP). This paper presents the longitudinal performance of operational TPs from the FAA, EUROCONTROL, and Airservices Australia, which illustrates that inaccurate longitudinal aircraft intent and resulting excessive prediction errors are evident in all three TPs. The performance of the ground-based TPs was subsequently compared to data extracted from the aircraft´s Flight Management System (FMS) through Future Air Navigation Systems (FANS) technology. FANS is standard equipment on wide-body aircraft and some domestic fleets, yet its full potential is widely under utilized. The paper argues significant improvement to ground based trajectory prediction accuracy is possible if the ground-TP is enhanced with aircraft data. It further demonstrates that this benefit can be achieved using aircraft data-link technologies, available today, to transmit FMS trajectory information.
Keywords
air traffic control; aircraft; trajectory control; ATM; FAA; FANS; FMS; TP; air traffic management; aircraft data-link technologies; aircraft flight management system; federal aviation administration; forecast meteorological conditions; future air navigation systems technology; ground-based trajectory predictor; longitudinal aircraft; trajectory prediction; Accuracy; Air traffic control; Aircraft; Atmospheric modeling; Australia; FAA; Trajectory;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Digital Avionics Systems Conference (DASC), 2011 IEEE/AIAA 30th
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
ISSN
2155-7195
Print_ISBN
978-1-61284-797-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DASC.2011.6096062
Filename
6096062
Link To Document