DocumentCode
910621
Title
Increasing runway capacity
Author
Astholz, Paul T. ; Sheftel, David J. ; Harris, Richard M.
Author_Institution
Federal Aviation Administration, Washington, D. C.
Volume
58
Issue
3
fYear
1970
fDate
3/1/1970 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
300
Lastpage
307
Abstract
Today´s major urban airport operates at saturation too frequently but can be upgraded to increase substantially aircraft movement rates by means of a number of system changes. These changes provide for reduced separations between aircraft, use of additional parallels, and more precise control of terminal traffic. There are incremental steps which can be taken to improve the current situation. However, to achieve substantial increases in operating rates with acceptable safety levels, it is necessary to introduce a new landing aid, reconfigure runway designs, use higher quality flight control equipment, and provide ground-air-ground data links and better surveillance for traffic flow organization and conflict monitoring. These features can be used to retrofit current airports or to design new airports. The flexibilities afforded by a new landing system can also reduce noise pollution by permitting flight path geometries not now achievable. The capacity of a single runway can be increased in the near term by approximately 40 percent without changes in current separation standards. In the longer term, it is expected that single runway capacity can be more than doubled with the introduction of improved guidance, flight control, air traffic control automation, and surveillance. Airport acreage can be utilized more efficiently by closer spacing of independent IFR runways.
Keywords
Aerospace control; Aerospace safety; Air traffic control; Aircraft; Airports; Land pollution; Monitoring; Noise reduction; Safety devices; Surveillance;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/PROC.1970.7632
Filename
1449562
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