A. Haraldsdottir, J. Scharl, M. Berge, M. L. Coats, J. King
{"title":"Performance analysis of arrival management with 3D paths and speed control","authors":"A. Haraldsdottir, J. Scharl, M. Berge, M. L. Coats, J. King","doi":"10.1109/DASC.2007.4391826","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper describes a trajectory-based arrival management concept that integrates the use of advanced flight management systems (FMS) and advanced air traffic management (ATM) automation tools. This concept, termed the 3D path concept, is a key near-term step that enables trajectory-based operations in a voice communications environment. When applied to arrival management, the ground-based automation system computes an optimal arrival schedule at the meter fixes and runways and selects trajectories that meet the schedule and ensure separation. These 4-D trajectories are cleared prior to top of descent (TOD) and provide necessary delay in the form of cruise and descent speed changes, combined with lateral path adjustments when needed. The trajectories are flown by the aircraft's FMS with accurate navigation performance and optimized vertical profiles, which is generally not feasible today due to the use of open-ended vectors. The analysis of the performance of this arrival management concept using the Boeing trajectory analysis and modeling environment (TAME) is presented in this paper. TAME uses the eurocontrol base of aircraft data (BADA) to represent aircraft performance for the fast-time simulation. The 3D path concept is applied to operations in the Houston airport area, and arrivals into Houston Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) are modeled using TAME. The results illustrate the influence of path and speed discretization, wind, trajectory prediction and navigation performance. Additionally, results showing the overall performance of the IAH arrival flow using 4 and 6 arrival meter fixes are presented, showing the increased airport throughput that can be achieved when airspace constraints are removed.","PeriodicalId":242641,"journal":{"name":"2007 IEEE/AIAA 26th Digital Avionics Systems Conference","volume":"8 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2007-12-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"2007 IEEE/AIAA 26th Digital Avionics Systems Conference","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/DASC.2007.4391826","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
This paper describes a trajectory-based arrival management concept that integrates the use of advanced flight management systems (FMS) and advanced air traffic management (ATM) automation tools. This concept, termed the 3D path concept, is a key near-term step that enables trajectory-based operations in a voice communications environment. When applied to arrival management, the ground-based automation system computes an optimal arrival schedule at the meter fixes and runways and selects trajectories that meet the schedule and ensure separation. These 4-D trajectories are cleared prior to top of descent (TOD) and provide necessary delay in the form of cruise and descent speed changes, combined with lateral path adjustments when needed. The trajectories are flown by the aircraft's FMS with accurate navigation performance and optimized vertical profiles, which is generally not feasible today due to the use of open-ended vectors. The analysis of the performance of this arrival management concept using the Boeing trajectory analysis and modeling environment (TAME) is presented in this paper. TAME uses the eurocontrol base of aircraft data (BADA) to represent aircraft performance for the fast-time simulation. The 3D path concept is applied to operations in the Houston airport area, and arrivals into Houston Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) are modeled using TAME. The results illustrate the influence of path and speed discretization, wind, trajectory prediction and navigation performance. Additionally, results showing the overall performance of the IAH arrival flow using 4 and 6 arrival meter fixes are presented, showing the increased airport throughput that can be achieved when airspace constraints are removed.
本文描述了一种基于轨迹的到达管理概念,该概念集成了先进的飞行管理系统(FMS)和先进的空中交通管理(ATM)自动化工具的使用。这一概念被称为3D路径概念,是实现语音通信环境中基于轨迹的操作的关键近期步骤。当应用于到达管理时,地面自动化系统在仪表固定点和跑道上计算最佳到达计划,并选择符合计划并确保分离的轨迹。这些4d轨迹在降落顶部(TOD)之前被清除,并以巡航和下降速度变化的形式提供必要的延迟,并在需要时结合横向路径调整。这些轨迹由飞机的FMS飞行,具有精确的导航性能和优化的垂直剖面,目前由于使用开放式矢量,这通常是不可行的。本文利用波音弹道分析与建模环境(TAME)对该到达管理概念的性能进行了分析。TAME采用飞机数据eurocontrol base of aircraft data (BADA)来表示飞机性能,实现快速仿真。3D路径概念应用于休斯顿机场区域的运营,并使用TAME对抵达休斯顿布什洲际机场(IAH)的人员进行建模。结果说明了路径和速度离散化、风、轨迹预测和导航性能的影响。此外,本文还展示了使用4个和6个到达计量表固定的IAH到达流的整体性能,显示了当空域限制被消除时,可以实现的机场吞吐量的增加。