Friday, January 27, 2017

3.6 – Research: UAS Integration in the NAS


3.4 – Research: UAS Integration in the NAS

Gregory Laxton

ASCI 638 – Human Factors in Unman Aerospace Systems

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Worldwide

January 29th, 2017



            The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Next Generation (NextGen) air transportation system was started in 2003 and originally intended to improve the “capacity, efficiency, and safety” (In Liddle & In Millett, 2015, p. vii) of the National Air Transportation System. In addition, it hopes to reduce carbon emissions and lower pollution. There are many components that fall under the “NextGen” moniker at the FAA. For example, they would like to quicken departures and arrivals by increasing the digital communications between the FAA controllers and users of the NAS (Federal Aviation Administration, 2017). The FAA hopes using performance navigation (PBN) along with required new technology onboard aircraft, will allow more takeoffs and landings from existing airports, increasing capacity. The FAA wants to improve navigation with more direct routing and increase the amount of aircraft that can take off and land each hour on existing runways. It’s a very ambitious plan for the FAA.

            En route flow improvements the FAA hopes to make will utilize Time Based Flow Management (TBFM) and Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) to increase efficiency across the country (Federal Aviation Administration, 2017). On arrival, one way the FAA hopes to smooth flow in to congested airports, is creating new waypoints and constant descent profiles, and specific arrival times at these points. There are many more pieces of the NextGen puzzle such as sending taxi instructions to pilots prior to landing in hopes of expediting aircraft off the runway and minimizing confusion with controllers.

Not everyone is pleased with new departure and arrival flows, which can be very different from long standing flight patterns. It may increase numbers at the airport, but if air traffic has increased 500% over your home, you may not be a fan of NextGen. In Phoenix, residents are upset exactly over this issue. They were not consulted by the FAA before the new flight paths were implemented. Consequently, resident noise complaints in the affected areas have risen dramatically. The mayor of Phoenix said he felt blind-sided by the FAA (CBS News, 2015).

            The FAA, like every federal agency, has a limited budget and must priorities resources. NextGen is an expensive goal, and the FAA said in 2015 it was forced to choose between ongoing maintenance of the existing infrastructure and “keeping NextGen progress” on schedule (Broderick, 2015).

One of the NextGen technologies which may help integrate UAS in to the NAS, is the proposed national Airspace System Voice System (NVS) (Federal Aviation Administration, 2017). This should allow controllers and aircraft to communicate via router based technology, essentially bypassing the line of sight VHF procedures in place now. In the proposal, a controller will be able to talk with an aircraft anywhere in the system, not just in its geographic region. This could benefit UAS operators flying BLOS. For example, if I can fly a UAS three states away, and still use router based communication to speak with a local controller, it helps remove an obstacle for UAS operating in the same airspace as manned aircraft. This would be a crucial benefit for UAS operators. If the GCS is in Nevada, but the UAS is overflying Texas, this technology if implemented, would allow the GCS to speak directly with Ft. Worth center, just like the commercial manned aircraft overhead. It doesn’t solve all the communication problems, but it helps.

From a human factors perspective, communications between traffic controllers and UAS GCS operators will be a challenge. It’s not hard to foresee several missed transmissions because the UAS operator needs a physiological break and is away from their station. If datalink sends text messages, the operator could execute the instructions immediately when back in position, but this response may lag in comparison manned aircraft.






References



Broderick, S. (2015, February 5). FAA Budget Request Balances Current Needs, NextGen | Aftermarket Solutions content from Aviation Week. Retrieved from http://aviationweek.com/aftermarket-solutions/faa-budget-request-balances-current-needs-nextgen

CBS News. (2015, January 30). FAA's new air traffic control system NextGen causing major noise pollution - CBS News. Retrieved from http://www.cbsnews.com/news/faa-new-air-traffic-control-system-nextgen-causing-major-noise-pollution/

Federal Aviation Administration. (2017, January 12). Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen). Retrieved from https://www.faa.gov/nextgen/

In Liddle, D. E., & In Millett, L. I. (2015). A review of the next generation air transportation system: Implications and importance of system architecture. DC.

National Research Council (U.S.). (2015). Transformation in the air: A review of the FAA's Certification Research Plan. DC: National Academy of Sciences.

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