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Management by Trajectory Trade Study of Roles and Responsibilities Between Participants and Automation ReportThis report describes a trade study of roles and responsibilities associated with the Management by Trajectory (MBT) concept. The MBT concept describes roles, responsibilities, and information and automation requirements for providing air traffic controllers and managers the ability to quickly generate, evaluate and implement changes to an aircraft's trajectory. In addition, the MBT concept describes mechanisms for imposing constraints on flight operator preferred trajectories only to the extent necessary to maintain safe and efficient traffic flows, and the concept provides a method for the exchange of trajectory information between ground automation systems and the aircraft that allows for trajectory synchronization and trajectory negotiation. The participant roles considered in this trade study include: airline dispatcher, flight crew, radar controller, traffic manager, and Air Traffic Control System Command Center (ATCSCC) traffic management specialists. The proposed allocation of roles and responsibilities was based on analysis of several use cases that were developed for this purpose as well as for walking through concept elements. The resulting allocation of roles and responsibilities reflects both increased automation capability to support many aviation functions, as well as increased flexibility to assign responsibilities to different participants - in many cases afforded by the increased automation capabilities. Note that the selection of participants to consider for allocation of each function is necessarily rooted in the current environment, in that MBT is envisioned as an evolution of the National Airspace System (NAS), and not a revolution. A key feature of the MBT allocations is a vision for the traffic management specialist to take on a greater role. This is facilitated by the vision that separation management functions, in addition to traffic management functions, will be carried out as trajectory management functions. This creates an opportunity for flexibility, allowing the traffic management specialist to carry out tasks that today can only be carried out by the controller currently in contact with the aircraft. This additional tasking for the traffic management specialist comes with requirements for workload management. An increased role for the Data-side (D-side) controller relative to the Radar-side (R-side) controller is a potential approach to mitigating workload for the traffic management specialist, as the D-side controller would have similar ability to perform separation management functions in what today might be considered the "trajectory management" timeframe. This analysis did not distinguish between the D-side and R-side controllers since in many cases the R-side controller works unassisted.
Document ID
20170011483
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Fernandes, Alicia D.
(Mosaic ATM, Inc. Leesburg, VA, United States)
Kaler, Curt
(Mosaic ATM, Inc. Leesburg, VA, United States)
Leiden, Kenneth
(Mosaic ATM, Inc. Leesburg, VA, United States)
Atkins, Stephen
(Mosaic ATM, Inc. Leesburg, VA, United States)
Bell, Alan
(Systems Enginuity, Inc. Manasses, VA, United States)
Kilbourne, Todd
(Systems Enginuity, Inc. Manasses, VA, United States)
Evans, Mark
(Independent Consultant Tarpon Springs, FL)
Date Acquired
December 1, 2017
Publication Date
October 1, 2017
Subject Category
Aircraft Stability And Control
Systems Analysis And Operations Research
Report/Patent Number
NF1676L-27775
NASA/CR-2017-219676
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 999182.02.65.07.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNL16AA17C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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