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Development of a Weather Capability for the Urban Air Mobility Airspace Research RoadmapTraditionally, the transportation system’s resiliency to the impacts of weather is an area where neglected or incorrect assumptions can lead to difficulties later in the research and development lifecycle. To mitigate this, NASA has ongoing efforts to develop a set of research roadmaps for organizing, integrating, and communicating research into new aviation infrastructure and transportation modalities, within which weather is being addressed early on. An effort has been undertaken to add weather assumptions and requirements to an already-existing roadmap for the Urban Air Mobility (UAM) airspace, seeking to integrate weather requirements early in the system design. This effort addresses the way in which state-of-the art and evolving weather science and technology can enable safe and efficient travel with increasing tempo of UAM operations over time. This paper describes the addition of weather as one of 10 capabilities into the UAM Airspace research roadmap, laying out the anticipated weather technology and information requirements needed to facilitate operations at various UAM Maturity Levels. The process developed and exercised by MIT Lincoln Laboratory researchers produced 41 unique requirements to be satisfied by a Weather capability for the UAM ecosystem, with more than 300 dependencies identified across the system. These requirements cover measurement, analysis, modeling, forecasting, decision support, dissemination, and overarching policy, and are provided with an overview of weather challenges for UAM. The requirements were mainly defined based on subject matter expert review of existing UAM Airspace system requirements, and refined based on iterative feedback with various stakeholders including regulators, academia, and industry. Going forward, this roadmap will help researchers and developers align to a common vision in ensuring that weather is appropriately considered in the UAM ecosystem.
Document ID
20230004353
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Tim Bonin
(MIT Lincoln Laboratory Lexington, Massachusetts, United States)
James Jones
(MIT Lincoln Laboratory Lexington, Massachusetts, United States)
Gabriele Enea
(MIT Lincoln Laboratory Lexington, Massachusetts, United States)
Ian Levitt
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Nipa Phojanamongkolkij
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
April 4, 2023
Subject Category
Aircraft Design, Testing and Performance
Aircraft Communications and Navigation
Meeting Information
Meeting: The 23rd Integrated Communications, Navigation, and Surveillance Conference (ICNS 2023)
Location: Herndon, VA
Country: US
Start Date: April 18, 2023
End Date: April 20, 2023
Sponsors: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Digital Avionics Technical Committee
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80LARC21T0004
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Peer Committee
Keywords
research roadmap
urban air mobility
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