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Adaptive Airborne Separation to Enable UAM Autonomy in Mixed AirspaceThe excitement and promise generated by Urban Air Mobility (UAM) concepts have inspired both new entrants and large aerospace companies throughout the world to invest hundreds of millions in research and development of air vehicles, both piloted and unpiloted, to fulfill these dreams. The management and separation of all these new aircraft have received much less attention, however, and even though NASA’s lead is advancing some promising concepts for Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Traffic Management (UTM), most operations today are limited to line of sight with the vehicle, airspace reservation and geofencing of individual flights. Various schemes have been proposed to control this new traffic, some modeled after conventional air traffic control and some proposing fully automatic management, either from a ground-based entity or carried out on board among the vehicles themselves. Previous work has examined vehicle-based traffic management in the very low altitude airspace within a metroplex called UTM airspace in which piloted traffic is rare. A management scheme was proposed in that work that takes advantage of the homogeneous nature of the traffic operating in UTM airspace. This paper expands that concept to include a traffic management plan usable at all altitudes desired for electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing urban and short-distance, inter-city transportation. The interactions with piloted aircraft operating under both visual and instrument flight rules are analyzed, and the role of Air Traffic Control services in the postulated mixed traffic environment is covered. Separation values that adapt to each type of traffic encounter are proposed, and the relationship between required airborne surveillance range and closure speed is given. Finally, realistic scenarios are presented illustrating how this concept can reliably handle the density and traffic mix that fully implemented and successful UAM operations would entail.
Document ID
20200000700
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Cotton, William B.
(National Inst. of Aerospace Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
February 4, 2020
Publication Date
January 1, 2020
Subject Category
Air Transportation And Safety
Report/Patent Number
NF1676L-34972
NASA/CR–2020-220438
Report Number: NF1676L-34972
Report Number: NASA/CR–2020-220438
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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