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UAM Instrument Flight Procedure Design and Evaluation in the Joby Flight SimulatorNASA’s Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) National Campaign (NC) partnered with Joby Aviation to test and evaluate different developmental candidate Urban Air Mobility (UAM) Instrument Flight Procedure (IFP) designs including new departure, enroute, approach and missed approach architectures using Joby’s high-fidelity engineering aircraft simulator. In conjunction with the simulator testing, this effort also evaluated related aspects such as charting, coding, and adherence to flight planning criteria. The test objectives were to assess the safety, efficiency, passenger comfort and noise of the different variations of the developmental IFPs. Safety-related measures include clearance from terrain and vertical obstructions, procedure flyability, and flight path conformance. Efficiency-related measures included time required, airspace volume required, and battery energy required. Passenger comfort and ride quality measures include roll/pitch angles, roll/pitch attitude change rates, and airspeeds prior to aggressive maneuvers, subjective pilot/passenger responses and acceleration forces. The noise impacts of the different IFPs will be interpolated/extrapolated using data from the simulator fed into a separate Joby acoustic software-based tool. Overall, several tradeoffs were identified and characterized between the different variations of the developmental IFP profiles. No single version of the developmental IFP structure scored highest across all measures listed above; rather, different IFP variations proved optimal for different measures, confirming that the best IFP depends on which specific measures are prioritized for a given aircraft, location and operation.
Document ID
20230003478
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Other - Working Paper
Authors
David Zahn
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Ryan Naru
(Joby Aviation)
Andrew Guion
(Armstrong Flight Research Center Rosamond, California, United States)
Sarah Eggum
(Federal Aviation Administration Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Date Acquired
March 14, 2023
Publication Date
February 24, 2023
Subject Category
Air Transportation and Safety
Report/Patent Number
AAM-NC-115-001
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: 395872
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
NASA Technical Management
Keywords
National Campaign
NC
UAM
Advanced Air Mobility
AAM
Airspace
Airspace Automation
PSU
Instrument Procedures
IFP
Aeronautics
ARMD
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