Title :
Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) cargo system: senior design capstone project
Author :
Han, Kevin ; Garcia, Angela M. ; Leo, Indah M. ; Campo, Miguel Martin del ; Muhammad, Chnur ; Ortiz-Valles, Libni ; Donohue, George L. ; Redeiss, Herman ; Sherry, Lance
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Syst. Eng. & Oper. Res., George Mason Univ., Fairfax, VA
Abstract :
To respond to current and future consumer demands in air cargo delivery, an unmanned air vehicle (UAV) cargo system is proposed. It would provide a safe, automated air cargo system which could be operational and more cost effective than the existing system. The system could potentially operate twenty four hours a day, seven days a week and provide guaranteed one business day delivery service. For the UAV cargo system to be in full operation it is assumed that the operational ground infrastructure for airport-independent operations is in place, accurate, and reliable, and the data link communication between air traffic control (ATC) and the UAV are in place. The analysis approach consists of evaluating the operational cost of the system by performing a trade-off analysis to measure the feasibility of the UAV cargo system for a business case; simulating the landing and en-route portion of the alternative proposed in order to analyze the operational performance of the system and to provide the best solution to the problem; and analyzing the safety and reliability of the system by performing failure rate analysis of the redundancy systems
Keywords :
aerospace safety; air traffic control; airports; fault tolerant computing; remotely operated vehicles; system recovery; ATC; UAV; air cargo delivery; air traffic control; airport-independent operation; data link communication; failure rate analysis; operational ground infrastructure; redundancy system; senior design capstone project; system reliability; trade-off analysis; unmanned aerial vehicle cargo system; Air traffic control; Airports; Analytical models; Costs; FAA; Failure analysis; Performance analysis; Performance evaluation; Terrorism; Unmanned aerial vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Systems and Information Engineering Design Symposium, 2004. Proceedings of the 2004 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Charlottesville, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-9744559-2-X
DOI :
10.1109/SIEDS.2004.239848