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Pilot Interactions in an Over-Constrained Conflict Scenario as Studied in a Piloted Simulation of Autonomous Aircraft OperationsFeasibility and safety of autonomous aircraft operations were studied in a multi-piloted simulation of overconstrained traffic conflicts to determine the need for, and utility of, priority flight rules to maintain safety in this extraordinary and potentially hazardous situation. An overconstrained traffic conflict is one in which the separation assurance objective is incompatible with other objectives. In addition, a proposed scheme for implementing priority flight rules by staggering the alerting time between the two aircraft in conflict was tested for effectiveness. The feasibility study was conducted through a simulation in the Air Traffic Operations Laboratory at the NASA Langley Research Center. This research activity is a continuation of the Distributed Air-Ground Traffic Management feasibility analysis reported in the 4th USA/Europe Air Traffic Management R&D Seminar in December 2001 (paper #48). The over-constrained conflict scenario studied here consisted of two piloted aircraft that were assigned an identical en-route waypoint arrival time and altitude crossing restriction. The simulation results indicated that the pilots safely resolved the conflict without the need for a priority flight rule system. Occurrences of unnecessary maneuvering near the common waypoint were traced to false conflict alerts, generated as the result of including waypoint constraint information in the broadcast data link message issued from each aircraft. This result suggests that, in the conservative interests of safety, broadcast intent information should be based on the commanded trajectory and not on the Flight Management System flight plan, to which the aircraft may not actually adhere. The use of priority flight rules had no effect on the percentage of the aircraft population meeting completely predictable which aircraft in a given pair would meet the constraints and which aircraft would make the first maneuver to yield right-of-way. Therefore, the proposed scheme for implementing priority flight rules through staggering the alerting time between the two aircraft was completely effective. The data and observations from this experiment, together with results from the previously reported study, support the feasibility of autonomous aircraft operations.
Document ID
20030064476
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Other
Authors
Wing, David J.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Barhydt, Richard
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Barmore, Bryan
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Krishnamurthy, Karthik
(Titan Corp. Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2003
Subject Category
Air Transportation And Safety
Meeting Information
Meeting: 5th US/Europe Air Traffic Management R and D Seminar
Location: Budapest
Country: Hungary
Start Date: June 23, 2003
End Date: June 27, 2003
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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