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Share the Sky: Concepts and Technologies That Will Shape Future Airspace UseThe airspace challenge for the United States is to protect national sovereignty and ensure the safety and security of those on the ground and in the air, while at the same time ensuring the efficiency of flight, reducing the costs involved, protecting the environment, and protecting the freedom of access to the airspace. Many visions of the future NAS hold a relatively near-term perspective, focusing on existing uses of the airspace and assuming that new uses will make up a small fraction of total use. In the longer term, the skies will be filled with diverse and amazing new air vehicles filling our societal needs. Anticipated new vehicles include autonomous air vehicles acting both independently and in coordinated groups, unpiloted cargo carriers, and large numbers of personal air vehicles and small-scale point-to-point transports. These vehicles will enable new capabilities that have the potential to increase societal mobility, transport freight at lower cost and with lower environmental impact, improve the study of the Earth s atmosphere and ecosystem, and increase societal safety and security by improving or drastically lowering the cost of critical services such as firefighting, emergency medical evacuation, search and rescue, border and neighborhood surveillance, and the inspection of our infrastructure. To ensure that uses of the airspace can continue to grow for the benefit of all, a new paradigm for operations is needed: equitably and safely sharing the airspace. This paper is an examination of such a vision, concentrating on the operations of all types of air vehicles and future uses of the National Airspace. Attributes of a long-term future airspace system are provided, emerging operations technologies are described, and initial steps in research and development are recommended.
Document ID
20110015829
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Ballin, Mark G.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Cotton, William
(National Inst. of Aerospace Associates Hampton, VA, United States)
Kopardekar, Parimal
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
September 20, 2011
Subject Category
Air Transportation And Safety
Report/Patent Number
NF1676L-12191
Meeting Information
Meeting: 11th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations (ATIO) Conference
Location: Virginia Beach, VA
Country: United States
Start Date: September 20, 2011
End Date: September 22, 2011
Sponsors: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 41193.02.07.07.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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