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ASAS in Tomorrows Airspace

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(Tailored arrivals) Aircraft have gone to the grave without ever using this capability ... current proposed ASAS applications and check for 'fit' Do the numbers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ASAS in Tomorrows Airspace


1
ASAS in Tomorrows Airspace
  • Pierre Gayraud, THALES
  • Bob Graham, EEC
  • Tony Henley, BAe Systems
  • Dr Anthony Smoker, IFATCA
  • ASAS-TN2 Consortium

2
Overview
  • Innovation Gaps and constrained thinking
  • So the opportunity is
  • Integration of ASAS - with what?
  • How might we integrate ASAS?
  • Benefits
  • A way forward?

3
The Innovation Gap
  • Innovation gap
  • Research and development activity is
    unconstrained by its very nature, and has the
    luxury of no creative or innovative boundaries
  • ATM confronted with imperative of maintaining and
    improving day to day and the next days problems,
    and constrained by bounded activity.
  • ATM deals with operational problems in the real
    world that are shifting, in response to external
    influences -
  • this reduces the scope for exploiting innovative
    potential of RD
  • Thus a mismatch exists between the potential of
    RD and system capability

4
So what about ASAS?
  • PO-ASAS envisaged ASAS being developed in
    specific ways
  • Some ASAS Applications seen as new ways of doing
    the same thing
  • Some ASAS applications require new procedures and
    airspace re- organisation
  • PO-ASAS seeks to derive operational benefits by
    enhancing capacity in the real world
  • Solving perceived operational (real world)
    problems
  • Despite all of the ASAS research and development
    hitherto, ANSPs are developing solutions to their
    real world problems with or without ASAS
  • Operational environment has moved on beyond ASAS
    designers view of the world
  • Can ASAS be applied outside the ANSP system
    designers view of the world?

5
So The opportunity is - Synergy?
  • Can we exploit the potential of ASAS in
    operational ways that were never envisaged by the
    system designers?
  • The potential for ASAS to operate with existing
    and planned elements of the operational
    environment in new and innovative ways
  • That supports the ANSPs in dealing with the next
    days problems, without drastic revision of
    airspace and sectorisation - or maybe it enhances
    these
  • That makes the controllers life easier
  • That does not make the pilots task harder
  • And supports ands enhances safety

6
Breaching the innovation gap
ASAS
4D
ACARE-ST2
Concept C3
New Space
innovation
Concept C2
Concept C1
System design, performance and technological
trade-off
7
High Capacity Gains
  • What philosophies are used by ANSPs to solve
    imminent capacity shortfalls?
  • RVSM
  • Airspace reorganisaton
  • Sectorisation and airway/UARs structures
  • RNAV/PRNAV route structures - (reducing the need
    to use positive radar separation by parallel
    routes 12gt nms apart)
  • Segregated traffic flows
  • Active Traffic management
  • Decision support tools (MTCD, Trajectory
    prediction, AMAN)
  • What does this mean for ASAS applications?
  • Is there an opportunity to deploy ASAS to enhance
    such strategies?

8
What opportunities have been lost?
  • The FMS has equipped aircraft for some25 years.
  • What FMS capabilities are used today?
  • RTA?
  • Offset?
  • (Tailored arrivals)
  • Aircraft have gone to the grave without ever
    using this capability
  • The manual of RNAV?

9
The Approach
Integrate ASAS into, and in support of, classic,
high capacity ATM operations
10
ASAS - an integrated tool - How?
  • (P)RNAV route structures and ASAS Spacing to
    reduce controller workload
  • Sequencing and managing flows with the aid of
    ASAS, other ground based tools and FMS
    capabilities
  • Establish a sequence, on an RNAV route at
    cruising level, and use ASAS techniques to
    maintain the sequence, including descent, into
    the Terminal Area
  • (P)RNAV ASAS CDAs ground based tools (e.g.
    AMAN) or techniques such as traffic management,
    to manage flows into the extended TMA and beyond
  • ASAS-Sequencing and merging in support of
    en-route, and extended TMA operations - not just
    in the approach and terminal phase

11
ASAS - as an integrated tool - How 2 ?
  • Use of delegated crossing and passing in Terminal
    area particularly in support of vertical
    transitions to reduced controller workload and
    allow more efficient vertical profiles
  • ITP, in its various forms, in Oceanic areas
  • Airborne situation awareness e.g. Successive
    Visual approach and related techniques

12
Integrated ASAS - Example 1 - ASAS spacing
en-route
Sector 5
Sector 5
  • 10 nms wide UAR
  • Sector length 150nms
  • Goal - deliver three aircraft, inbound to the
    same TMA, in trail at same level for handover to
    next sector

10 nms
Sector 36
Sector 36
13
Integrated ASAS - Example 1 - ASAS spacing
en-route
Sector 5
  • Radar vectors to path stretch
  • Speed control MACH/IAS
  • Typically, Parallel headings required for all six
    aircraft to optimise available manouvere space,
    to achieve co-ordination transfer level
  • Workload intensive

Sector 36
14
Integrated ASAS - Example 1 - ASAS spacing
en-route
Sector 5
  • 12NMS wide RNAV routes
  • Descend to same level
  • Radar vectors to create manouvere space and to
    establish ASAS sequence
  • Stable,separated traffic stream for upstream
    sector
  • Same MACH/IAS speed control regime
  • Effect on
  • Controller workload
  • Pilot Workload

Sector 6
15
Integrated ASAS - Example 2 ASAS SM en-route
Fly fast
GIBSO
Mach .80/290-KIAS
  • Aircraft at cruising levels, M.081-5
  • Aircraft need to be at FL270, in trail, at GIBSO
  • Typically, 200 track miles to GIBSO
  • Speed control early on
  • Radar vectors, and speed adjustments to achieve
    sequence for downstream sector
  • Very resource intensive
  • Flight efficiency?

16
Integrated ASAS - Example 2 ASAS SM en-route
GIBSO
  • Aircraft at cruising levels, M.081-5
  • Aircraft need to be at FL270, in trail, at GIBSO
  • Typically, 200 track miles to GIBSO
  • Use radar vectors to position aircraft to
    establish ASAS sequence and merge

17
ASAS - as an integrated tool - Potential Benefits?
  • Redistribution of Controller workload but
    increase in pilot workload - balance overall?
    CAPACITY
  • Providing support to the controller where they
    need it most in managing traffic flows CAPACITY
  • Reduced effect of stochastic nature of traffic
    flows potential safety benefits (reduction in
    sector overloads)
  • Can work with and enhance current airspace
    regimes, and can support planned enhancements
    and modification to achieve greater benefits
    foundation for future iterations
  • Simple step towards collaborative philosophy ATM
  • And there are other innovations that might be
    useful - FMS path objects?

18
What to do?
  • Break out of ASAS packages
  • Look at safety, interoperability and performance
    issues
  • Reassess current proposed ASAS applications and
    check for fit
  • Do the numbers and go for it!
  • But who will lead -
  • A new direction for ASAS enabled ATM?

19
  • Thank you for listening
  • Any questions?
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