Title: International ROA Airspace Integration Issues
1AIAA's 1st Technical Conference and Workshop on
Unmanned Aerospace Vehicles, Systems,
Technologies, and Operations
International ROA Airspace Integration Issues
Geoffrey S. Parker TASC, Chantilly, VA May 20,
2002
1
2Primary Issues
- See and Avoid
- Navigation Redundancy
- Traffic-alert Collision Avoidance System (TCAS)
3Assumptions
- The capability to operate with manned aircraft
requires equivalent airspace access - Having a performance parameter to be robustly
sufficient for all classes of airspace is
fundamental to worldwide deployability - ROAs are aircraft when regulated as aircraft and
equipped as aircraft, they will warrant the same
airspace access as aircraft
4The Significance of Aircraft
- The body of regulations for aircraft, here and
internationally, is established - Establishing some regulations as not
applicable, such as oxygen requirements,
relieves us of having to establish body of
regulations for a new category
- A separate category (such as that established
for gliders) would assure ROAs are special
management aircraft indefinitely - Military responsiveness dictates that ROAs be
normalized for civil airspace -- time for
special coordination for short notice deployments
does not support military utility
The team of GSTF assets, aligned within an AEF,
will be on call and ready . . . As in any
emerging crisis, the first requirements call for
ISR platforms. General Jumper
5The Aircraft Challenge is CNS/ATM
- Communication, Navigation and Surveillance for
Air Traffic Management (CNS/ATM) is driving
requirements for all aircraft worldwide - The global aviation support architecture is
moving toward CNS/ATM to meet user and air
traffic management demands - Increased traffic density and commensurate safety
concerns are driving all airspace users to
compliance - As established in the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO), Standards and
Recommended Practices (SARPs), flights in Europe,
for example, (greater than 30 hours per year) are
expected to comply. Non-compliant aircraft will
be accepted according to workload and then may
have to accept altitudes and routes that may
negate the mission - The larger European NATO members have stated the
requirement that their ROAs be fully compliant
with civil requirements - Invoking a state aircraft exception does compel
any nation to accept operations in their
sovereign airspace. Work arounds, if allowed,
may be incompatible with mission objectives
6International Airspace Integration
See and Avoid
7See and Avoid
See and Avoid Can Not Be Delegated
- For ROAs, having an on-board capability to detect
and maneuver is inherent in the see-and-avoid
requirement - In civil airspace, FAA controllers have been
unwilling to add the operators role in air
traffic separation to their own - Theres an implied doctrine of shared
responsibility air ground - Changing this doctrine would contradict the move
ATC to ATM where more, not less, responsibility
is on the operator - The trend is to move away from
infrastructure-based systems towards more
autonomous, vehicle-based system for collision
avoidance. (Federal Radionavigation Sys Plan) - In airspace where uncontrolled traffic can be
expected, the separation burden is wholly on the
operators to avoid non-cooperative targets
The Trend Toward ATM
See and Avoid
ATM
Responsibility
ARTCC
8See and Avoid FAA Guidance
FAA Order 7610.4
- Under Air Force Flight Standards Agency (AFFSA)
leadership, the FAA adopted this language that
has enabled many ROA operations to date - For example, Global Hawk operations have used
- Visual observers
- Patrol/Chase aircraft
- Radar observation (From Air Ground)
- However, the CONOPs for arrival and departure
employed to date is not sustainable
- Provide an equivalent level of safety,
comparable to see-and-avoid requirements for
manned aircraft. - Alternatives explicitly cited in the directive
that would suffice - Radar observation
- Forward or side looking cameras
- Electronic detection systems
- Visual observation
- Monitored by patrol or chase aircraft
- Or a combination thereof
This is FAA guidance for safety not for
integration into the NAS
9An Example of the Application of 7610.4 Approach
into Langley AFB
- Uses Segregation Strategy
- Activate Warning Area, W-386A
- Norfolk TRACON Radar
- Giant Killer Radar Monitoring
- Patrol Aircraft Radar Clearing
- Approach Landing Before Morning Twilight
- FAA COA Required
- AFFSA Waivers Required
- FAA Declined To Provide Primary Radar Service
Global Hawk deployed from Edwards AFB to Langley
AFB in June 2001. The approach into Langley
required several special arrangements.
W-386A
Giant Killer Radar
Patrol Aircraft
Langley AFB
Norfolk TRACON
Commander Naval Air Force, Atlantic Fleet, Fleet
Area Control and Surveillance Facility (FACSFAC)
Virginia Capes
10Due Regard Requirements
DoD Directive 4540.1
Operations not conducted under ICAO are under the
due regard or operational prerogative of
military aircraft. Requires the one or more of
the following conditions
- VMC (implies pilot on board)
- Under radar surveillance and communications
with a surface facility - Aircraft equipped with an airborne radar
sufficient to provide safe separation from air
traffic
Sea of Japan
North Korea
Article 3 of the Chicago Convention stipulates
there must be due regard for the safety of
navigation of civil aircraft Article 8,
similarly, requires each state . . . to insure
that the flight of such aircraft without a pilot,
in regions open to civil aircraft, shall be so
controlled as to obviate danger to civil
aircraft.
China
South China Sea
Hainan Island
11Due Regard
- An airborne radar can provide
- Sufficient field of view and range for assured
separation - Forward situational awareness in lieu of
controller or GCI information - Detection that is not dependent of on transponder
reporting - Processed targets are compatible with
narrow-band widths
Sea of Japan
North Korea
China
South China Sea
Hainan Island
12Independent Functional Detection Range (Dynamic
Analysis)
Protection Envelope at FL600
Not to scale
13International Airspace Integration
So, we need to combine our capabilities to
provide a rapid response. That has always been
our forte, to arrive rapidly and to do it in a
global way. To be able to get our ISR assets on
the scene early. It is always the first thing
that the CINCs ask for . . . General Jumper
14Issues
Regulatory
- Air traffic regulators expect aircraft to have
equipment compatible with the routes flown, e.g.
a VOR airway requires a VOR - Navigational equipment (is required) appropriate
to the ground facilities to be used (FAR Part 91) - FAA AC 90-96 on BRNAV . . . In the event of
(an RNAV) system failure, the aircraft (must)
retain the capability to navigate relative to
ground-based navigation aids. - ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs)
With the failure of one item of equipment,
navigation equipment must be sufficient to
complete the flight
15Issues
GPS Reliability Vulnerability
- Presidents Commission on Critical Infrastructure
Protection The most significant vulnerability
to the transportation infrastructure . . . is the
association of the modernization of the NAS with
the plan to adopt the GPS as the sole basis for
radionavigation in the US by 2010. This creates
the basis for a single-point failure - Federal Radionavigation Plan
- The effects of jamming and unintentional
interference are primarily to increase the
workload of both the users and the air traffic
controllers - Some care will be needed in high-latitude and
equatorial zone Satnav-based instrument
approaches at night - Threats? Increased dependency on GPS for weapon
targeting and weapon systems motivates
adversaries to identify and exploit
vulnerabilities - EuroControl Navigation Strategy Expects there
is need for a ground-based back-up system for
GNSS for the foreseeable future for all phases of
flight. The requirement for DME is projected
indefinitely into the future
Ionospheric scintillation can cause
fluctuations in radio wave propagation. This
causes outages on satellite-to-ground or
satellite-to-aircraft transmissions especially in
the equatorial belt. Fleet Satellite
Communications, Air Force Satellite
Communications, and Navstar Global Positioning
Systems are especially vulnerable to this form
of space weather. (Air University Spacecast
2020)
16DOTs GPS Vulnerability Assessment
New! Signed March 2002
Findings
There is growing awareness within the
transportation community of the risks associated
with the GPS system being the only means for
position determination . . .
Like any radionavigation system, GPS is
vulnerable to interference that can be reduced
but not eliminated.
Overarching Issues
There are many augmentation to GPS . . . that
improve the basic accuracy, reliability . . .
even with these augmentations, use of GPS still
can disrupted . . .
As GPS further penetrates into the civil
infrastructure, it becomes a tempting target that
could be exploited by individual, groups, or
countries hostile to the United States.
- Impact to policy in the 2001 Radionavigation
Plan - Unaugmented GPS is approved as a primary system
for use in oceanic and remote airspace. - GPS is approved as a supplemental system for
domestic en route and terminal navigation, and
for nonprecision approach and landing operations. - The FAAs phase-down plan for ground-based
Navaids retains at least a minimum operational
network of ground-based Navaids for the
foreseeable future. - Sufficient ground-based Navaids will be
maintained to provide the FAA and the airspace
users with a safe recovery and sustained
operations capability in the event of a
disruption in Satnav service.
Recommendations
Public policy must ensure, primarily, that
safety is maintained even in the event of loss of
GPS.
Because requiring a GPS backup will involve
considerable government and user expense, it is
recommended that the transportation community
determine the level of risk each critical
application is exposed to, what level of risk
each application can accept, the costs associated
with lowering the risk to this level, and how
such costs are to be funded.
17Precedent Issue
- Precedent
- A manned aircraft, with INS/GPS certified as the
sole means of navigation, could be able to
default to contact navigation/map reading dead
reckoning - Issue
- Does an ROAs navigational system provide
sufficient military robustness commensurate with
the value of the platform, regulatory
requirements, and its worldwide mission?
18Global Hawk Airspace Integration
Traffic-alert and Collision Avoidance System
(TCAS)
19Requirement
- ICAO SARPs include the TCAS requirement for all
aircraft exceeding 5700kg by 1 Jan 2005 - ECAC JAA have adopted the ICAO standard
- Two other ICAO regions (AFI Asia/PAC) have
implemented TCAS requirements - GATM Capstone Requirements Document (Objective)
- Global Hawk ORD, required now for see-and-avoid
required in 2005 for international compliance
(Threshold)
European Civil Aviation Conference (ECAC),
Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA)
20Background
- TCAS is a position player for defense in
depth under routine traffic management. TCAS
plays in a context that includes - Airspace structure, standards recommended
practices - Operator mission planning
- Training, experience, and familiarity with
operational patterns of activity - Shared responsibility between air traffic
operations authorities and aircrews
Structural arrangements provide the benefits of a
zone defense
21Background
- When flying due regard without EMCON, TCAS
provides a source of situational awareness for
cooperative targets - The ROA becomes the non-cooperative target
- Airspace structure, standards recommended
practices are still a factor in the expected
tracks and activity for other targets - TCAS becomes the substitute for ATC/ATM for
cooperative traffic
Procedural
TCAS
See and Avoid
With EMCON, TCAS would not play in due regard
22Summary
- Global compliance is an inherent prerequisite for
Global deployability - While ROAs qualify for the state aircraft
exemption, the potential operational limitations
are not acceptable. (GATM CRD) - Early incorporation of aircraft requirements will
ease acceptance of ROAs worldwide - An unintelligent ROA should not be denied the
information required for manned aircraft