民用空中交通管理环境下具有探测和回避能力的大型无人机操作程序测试

Timothy Bleakley, E. Sunil
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A new operating mode was also added for Cockpit Display of Traffic Information (CDTI)-assisted visual separation (CAVS), to test the efficiency and effectiveness of procedures for controllers to delegate separation responsibility to the remote pilot during the landing approach. Operating procedures were initially based on those described in the Operational Services Environment Description appendix of RTCA DO-365B.The professional participants provided qualitative assessment of several human factors aspects for each scenario and the procedures employed, including their perceptions of safety, operational acceptability, situational awareness and workload. The experiments proved that appropriately-equipped UAS can be introduced safely into the existing airspace system, and that controllers adapt quickly to the few unique considerations needed when managing UAS traffic. The DAA system gave remote pilots unprecedented traffic awareness compared to conventional incockpit situations, enabling them to identify potential conflicts at a similar time to ATC, or even before. This situation emphasized the need for procedures that support efficient coordination between remote pilots and ATC, to avoid contrary resolutions to the same identified conflict. Beneficial changes to DAA procedures were also identified that would improve overall safety and operational efficiency. For example, by providing more options when responding to traffic alerts in the terminal area, and to ensure that remote pilots follow all right of way rules, for predictability when responding to DAA alerting and guidance. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

荷兰皇家航空航天中心(NLR)与通用原子航空系统公司(GA-ASI)和代尔夫特信息系统公司(ISD)合作,进行了一系列人在环模拟实验,以评估和改进大型无人驾驶飞机系统(UAS)完全集成到典型民用空中交通场景中的安全性和效率。这些实验使用了高保真空中交通管制(ATC)模拟设施,为专业管制员和飞行员提供了将大型无人机操作引入其他熟悉的空中交通情况的经验。目前,还没有允许在现实世界中进行此类测试的无人机操作批准,因此所获得的经验和教训对于在不久的将来将大型无人机安全、顺利地引入民用空域运营做准备是非常宝贵的。探测和避免(DAA)技术是实现大型无人机非隔离、超视距(BVLOS)操作的关键,它使远程飞行员能够保持普遍的空中通行权规则,而不需要传统的能力看到飞机驾驶舱外。因此,这些实验的重点是测试远程飞行员和空中交通管制员所需的DAA能力和操作程序,以保持无人驾驶飞机(UA)与其他飞机的分离并避免碰撞。经过精心设计的场景可以触发DAA警报并向远程飞行员提供指导,需要适当程序的响应,包括与空中交通管制中心的协调,以评估这些程序的安全性和操作效率。许多场景都要求流量犯程序性错误,以便创建触发DAA警报的冲突几何图形。还纳入了UAS突发事件,例如C2链路丢失,以评估远程飞行员和管制员的响应程序。GA-ASI的SkyGuardian是一种涡轮螺旋桨驱动的大型固定翼无人机,被用作无人机在常规跑道上运行的性能模型,可以执行从基础设施调查到货物运输等各种飞行。选择鹿特丹机场及其周边空域作为运行环境,以代表中等繁忙和复杂的欧洲空域。UAS飞行场景涵盖了所有典型的国内空域空中交通管制角色,包括塔台、进近和航路管制员,并包括典型的背景商业和通用航空交通模式和密度。测试的DAA能力基于RTCA DO-365B最低作战性能标准(MOPS)。早期的一系列实验测试了1类系统的能力,该系统具有空对空雷达、主动监视、ADS-B In和DAA警报和制导的航路自分离,以及5类DAA警报和制导的终端区域。最新的一系列实验将DAA系统升级为2级能力,增加了TCAS II防撞逻辑,并通过UA自动执行TCAS解决方案咨询。此外,还为座舱交通信息显示(CDTI)辅助视觉分离(CAVS)增加了一种新的操作模式,以测试管制员在着陆进近时将分离责任委托给远程飞行员的程序的效率和有效性。操作程序最初是基于RTCA DO-365B的“操作服务环境描述”附录中描述的。专业参与者对每个情景和所采用的程序的几个人为因素方面进行了定性评估,包括他们对安全性、操作可接受性、态势感知和工作量的看法。实验证明,适当装备的无人机可以安全地引入现有的空域系统,并且在管理无人机交通时,控制器可以快速适应所需的少数独特考虑因素。与传统的座舱情况相比,DAA系统为远程飞行员提供了前所未有的交通感知能力,使他们能够在与空管相似的时间,甚至更早的时间识别潜在的冲突。这种情况强调需要有支持远程飞行员和空中交通管制中心之间有效协调的程序,以避免对同一已查明的冲突采取相反的解决办法。还确定了DAA程序的有益变化,这些变化将提高总体安全性和操作效率。例如,在响应终点区的交通警报时提供更多的选择,并确保远程飞行员遵守所有的路权规则,以在响应DAA警报和指导时实现可预测性。 此外,当UA在Lost C2 Link状态下执行自动解决方案咨询时,控制器表示希望UA在清除冲突后自动返回其批准的丢失链路高度,以最小化次要冲突的发生率并减少控制器工作负载。这些发现和其他发现将反馈给RTCA委员会,以进一步改进DAA MOPS。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Testing Operating Procedures for Large UAS with Detect and Avoid Capabilities in Civil Air Traffic Management Environments
The Royal Netherlands Aerospace Center (NLR), in partnership with General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI) and Information Systems Delft (ISD), has conducted several series of human-in-the-loop simulation experiments to assess and refine the safety and efficiency of fully integrating operations of large uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS) into typical civil air traffic scenarios. These experiments used a high-fidelity Air Traffic Control (ATC) simulation facility to provide professional controllers and pilots with the experience of introducing large UAS operations into otherwise familiar air traffic situations. Currently, there are no UAS operating approvals that would allow such tests to be conducted in the real world, so the experience gained and lessons learned are invaluable in preparing for safe and smooth introduction of large UAS into civil airspace operations in the near future.Detect and Avoid (DAA) technologies are key to allowing nonsegregated, beyond visual line-of-sight (BVLOS) operation of large UAS, by enabling their remote pilots to keep the universal right of way rules of the air, without the conventional ability to see out of the aircraft's cockpit. The focus of these experiments, therefore, has been to test DAA capabilities and operating procedures needed for remote pilots and air traffic controllers to maintain separation of the uncrewed aircraft (UA) from other aircraft and to avoid collisions. Scenarios were carefully designed to trigger DAA alerting and guidance to the remote pilot, requiring a response with appropriate procedures, including coordination with ATC, to assess the safety and operational efficiency of those procedures. Many of the scenarios required traffic to make procedural mistakes in order to create conflict geometries that would trigger DAA alerts. UAS contingencies were also incorporated, such as loss of C2 link, to evaluate remote pilot and controller response procedures.GA-ASI's SkyGuardian, a turboprop-powered, large fixed-wing UAS, was used as the performance model for a UAS operating from conventional runways that could perform flights as diverse as infrastructure surveying to cargo transport. Rotterdam airport and its surrounding airspace was selected as the operating context, to typify moderately busy and complex European airspace. The UAS flight scenarios spanned all the typical domestic airspace ATC roles, involving Tower, Approach and Route controllers, and included typical background commercial and general aviation traffic patterns and densities.The DAA capabilities tested are based on RTCA DO-365B Minimum Operational Performance Standards (MOPS). Earlier series of experiments tested the capabilities of a Class 1 system with air-to-air radar, active surveillance, ADS-B In and DAA alerting and guidance for en-route self-separation, plus Class 5 for DAA alerting and guidance in the terminal area. The latest series of experiments upgraded the DAA system to Class 2 capabilities with the addition of TCAS II collision avoidance logic, also with automatic execution of TCAS Resolution Advisories by the UA. A new operating mode was also added for Cockpit Display of Traffic Information (CDTI)-assisted visual separation (CAVS), to test the efficiency and effectiveness of procedures for controllers to delegate separation responsibility to the remote pilot during the landing approach. Operating procedures were initially based on those described in the Operational Services Environment Description appendix of RTCA DO-365B.The professional participants provided qualitative assessment of several human factors aspects for each scenario and the procedures employed, including their perceptions of safety, operational acceptability, situational awareness and workload. The experiments proved that appropriately-equipped UAS can be introduced safely into the existing airspace system, and that controllers adapt quickly to the few unique considerations needed when managing UAS traffic. The DAA system gave remote pilots unprecedented traffic awareness compared to conventional incockpit situations, enabling them to identify potential conflicts at a similar time to ATC, or even before. This situation emphasized the need for procedures that support efficient coordination between remote pilots and ATC, to avoid contrary resolutions to the same identified conflict. Beneficial changes to DAA procedures were also identified that would improve overall safety and operational efficiency. For example, by providing more options when responding to traffic alerts in the terminal area, and to ensure that remote pilots follow all right of way rules, for predictability when responding to DAA alerting and guidance. Furthermore, when the UA executes an automatic Resolution Advisory while in the Lost C2 Link state, controllers expressed a preference for the UA to return automatically to its approved lost link altitude, after becoming clear of the conflict, to minimize the incidence of secondary conflicts and to reduce controller workload. These findings and others will be fed back to RTCA committees to further improve DAA MOPS.
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