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Complexity Science Applications to Dynamic Trajectory Management: Research StrategiesThe promise of the Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen) is strongly tied to the concept of trajectory-based operations in the national airspace system. Existing efforts to develop trajectory management concepts are largely focused on individual trajectories, optimized independently, then de-conflicted among each other, and individually re-optimized, as possible. The benefits in capacity, fuel, and time are valuable, though perhaps could be greater through alternative strategies. The concept of agent-based trajectories offers a strategy for automation of simultaneous multiple trajectory management. The anticipated result of the strategy would be dynamic management of multiple trajectories with interacting and interdependent outcomes that satisfy multiple, conflicting constraints. These constraints would include the business case for operators, the capacity case for the Air Navigation Service Provider (ANSP), and the environmental case for noise and emissions. The benefits in capacity, fuel, and time might be improved over those possible under individual trajectory management approaches. The proposed approach relies on computational agent-based modeling (ABM), combinatorial mathematics, as well as application of "traffic physics" concepts to the challenge, and modeling and simulation capabilities. The proposed strategy could support transforming air traffic control from managing individual aircraft behaviors to managing systemic behavior of air traffic in the NAS. A system built on the approach could provide the ability to know when regions of airspace approach being "full," that is, having non-viable local solution space for optimizing trajectories in advance.
Document ID
20090035615
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Sawhill, Bruce
(NextGen AeroSciences Williamsburg, VA, United States)
Herriot, James
(NextGen AeroSciences Williamsburg, VA, United States)
Holmes, Bruce J.
(NextGen AeroSciences Williamsburg, VA, United States)
Alexandrov, Natalia
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 24, 2013
Publication Date
September 21, 2009
Subject Category
Air Transportation And Safety
Report/Patent Number
LF99-9488
AIAA Paper 2009-7090
Meeting Information
Meeting: 9th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference
Location: Hilton Head, SC
Country: United States
Start Date: September 21, 2009
End Date: September 24, 2009
Sponsors: American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 411931.02.71.07.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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