Title: ASAS Implementation in Avionics
1ASAS Implementation in Avionics
- Pierre GAYRAUD
- Thales Avionics
- in collaboration with ACSS
2Content
- ASAS functions to implement
- ADS-B-out
- ADS-B-inÂ
- EUROCONTROL ASFA study
- ASAS-ACAS relationship
- Surveillance data processing
- AEEC Equipment standards
- Conclusion
3ASAS functions to implement
Message Processing
Applications
Aircraft data
4ASAS Package I functions to implement
ADS-B Out ADS-B Out ADS-B In ADS-B In ADS-B In
Application category Application category Aircraft data ADS-B Tx ADS-B Rx Applications HMI
Ground surveillance ADS-B-ACC, TMA, NRA, APT, ADD ? ?
Airborne Situational Awareness ATSA-SURF ATSA-AIRB and Visual acquisition ATSA SA ATSA-SVA ? ? ? ?
surveillance Airborne spacing ASPA-SM, ASPA-ITP, ASPA-CP ? ? ? ? ?
5ADS-B out Transmitters
- Mode S 1090 ES link transmitters already on board
- Mode S transponder (mandatory on all IFR aircraft
in Europe as of 31/03/2005) - The transmission of Extended Squitters is part
of the standard (provided Registers are loaded) - UAT and VDL Mode 4 transmitters
- Tx/Rx boxes
6ADS-B OutData
- Data allowed to be broadcast are defined by the
existing ICAO SARPS (at least for Mode S ES and
VDL Mode 4) - Aircraft identification, horizontal position and
altitudes, velocity - The definition of Intents is not stable
- ADS-B raises new problems concerning the quality
of the data - Instead of predetermined data characteristics
(e.g. radar data),qualifiers are associated to
the transmitted data according to the aircraft
avionics capabilities (accuracy, integrity) - The current SARPS requires transmission of an
Horizontal Protection limit and uncertainty
characteristics - There are plans to update SARPS (NIC, SIL, NAC)
for air-air applications (backwards compatibility
for air-ground) - There are also works within RTCA about the
transmission of additional quality data
(continuity, latency) through a TQL (Transmit
Quality level) - gt Standards not totally stable
7ADS-B-In functions
8Airborne Surveillance Functional Architecture
(ASFA Study)
- EUROCONTROL ADS program has sponsored two teams
- Main outcomes
- ASAS/ACAS relationship
- Functional, performance and interface
requirements for Surveillance Data Processing (or
A-SDPD Airborne Surveillance Data Processing and
Distribution) - A-SDPD architecture
- Follow-on A-SDPD prototype test on the ADS-B
Validation Testbed (AVT) at EEC
9ADS-B-InASAS-ACAS relationship
- Common parts
- ACAS and ASAS tracks have to be displayed
consistently to the crew - gt A synthesis of ACAS and ASAS display tracks
is necessary before display (one symbol per
aircraft) - For Mode S ES, the 1090 receiver can be shared by
ACAS and ASAS (ICAO SARPS have provision for) - Interactions
- ICAO has specified the ACAS Â hybrid
surveillance - A-SDPD may use ACAS tracks to consolidate ASAS
tracks
10ADS-B-InASAS-ACAS relationship
- But some principles have to be followed
- Independence is required by ICAO
- no ASAS-ACAS common failure cause (it could
induce an infringed separation while preventing
ACAS to detect dangerous geometry) - gt Separated ACAS and ASAS surveillance
processing - Compatibility is required
- the operations of one system shall not degrade
the performance of the other(e.g. no increase
of the TA or RA rates during manoeuvres supported
by ASAS) - Interoperability is desirable
- ACAS  hybrid surveillance decreases the 1090
interrogation rate (ICAO requirements prevent to
jeopardize independence) - Comparison of ASAS data with ACAS tracks improves
the integrity of ASAS data without impacting the
independence (comparison is used only when in
agreement)
11ADS-B-InASAS-ACAS relationship
- Partitioning techniques (software and hardware)
allow - The ASAS functions (A-SDPD, Applications, Display
Management) to be hosted in a TCAS Computer - While fulfilling the independence conditions
- Advantages
- Box count minimization (direct cost, weight,
reliability, maintenance) - No new antenna required for ASAS (as far as 1090
ES is used) - Facilitates interactions between the two
functions - Some ASAS applications could require services
from FMS - gt The TCAS Computer becomes the  Traffic
ComputerÂ
12Surveillance Data Processing (A-SDPD)
TIS-B
TIS-B
TIS-B
- Via three potential links
- Mode S extended Squitter
- UAT
- VDL Mode 4
- A-SDPD can receive 3 types of data
- Directly through ADS-B links from the ADS-B
capable surrounding aircraft - Via one or several TIS-B links for aircraft
covered by each TIS-B - ACAS tracks from ACAS surveillance
13Surveillance Data Processing (A-SDPD)
- The ASFA study has analysed the functional aspect
- Due to the number of combinations  what-ifÂ
analysis have been performed - Package I applications will not use the complete
set of combinations (probably only 1090 ES, TIS-B
?) - The main objectives is to provide the data
integrity and continuity matching the
applications needs - Data sources (target position, altitude,
velocity) - The number of independent sources which can be
used to increase the integrity is limited - Horizontal position ADS-B and ACAS (and in some
cases TIS-B) - Vertical data no redundancy, only the altitude
transmit by the target aircraft
14Surveillance Data Processing (A-SDPD)
- Data links
- Data link redundancy mainly improve continuity
- Applications
- Differing requirements according to the
considered applications - But not determined yet
- Top down analysis required (On-going within the
Requirement Focus Group) - Critical role of the 24-bit ICAO address, the
only unique target aircraft identifier on which
tracks correlation is based (subsequently the
case of Mode A/C aircraft not adequately solved
yet)
15Surveillance Data Processing (A-SDPD)
Application requests
Data Distribution
Display Applications
Track Management
1090 ES (ADS-B TIS-B) UAT (ADS-B TIS-B) VDL
M4 (ADS-B TIS-B) ACAS
Data Management
16AEEC Equipment standards
- AEEC (Airlines Electronic Engineering Committee)
is defining the preferred airborne architectures
- SAI Committee the best place for ADS-B-In is the
TCAS Computer (turned it in a Traffic Computer) - Ex ACSS TCAS3000
- ISS Committee is working on ARINC 768 (Integrated
Surveillance System) - An architecture to simplify on-board
surveillance installation -
- Benefiting from the partitioning techniques it is
possible to add - Mode S Transponder, TAWS, WXR
- Alarm and display prioritization because those
functions display data on the ND and/or raise
alarms - gt The Traffic Computer is the backbone of the
ISS concept (Integrated Surveillance System)
17Conclusion
- The avionics of modern Air Transport Aircraft can
accommodate Package 1 ASAS applications without
any addition of boxes or antennas - ADS-B-Out and ADS-B-In to be hosted
- ADS-B-Out by the Mode S Transponder
- ADS-B-In mainly by the TCAS computer (Traffic
Computer)(2 when required by architecture
considerations) - It is the first step of the Integrated
Surveillance System - Dont forget the system integration with the
surrounding equipment (impact on EIS/CDTI,
Warning systems, FMS) - Definition of standards not stable