评估双传感器增强飞行视觉系统以实现等效视觉操作

L. Kramer, T. Etherington, K. Severance, R. Bailey, Steven P. Williams, S. Harrison
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引用次数: 16

摘要

基于飞行甲板的视觉系统技术,如合成视觉(SV)和增强飞行视觉系统(EFVS),可以作为一种革命性的机组/飞行器接口使能技术,以满足下一代航空运输系统等效视觉操作(EVO)概念的挑战。实现当前目视飞行规则(VFR)安全操作的能力,并在不受天气和能见度条件影响的情况下保持VFR的操作速度。一个重要的挑战在于飞机和机场所需设备的定义,以实现EVO概念目标。通过一项基于运动的模拟器实验来评估操作可行性、飞行员工作量和飞行员接受度,通过平视显示器(HUD)上的机载视觉系统技术,在能见度低至300英尺跑道视觉范围的情况下,在公布的垂直制导下进行直入式仪表进近着陆、触地和推出到安全滑行速度。12名机组人员评估了两种双传感器(毫米波雷达和前视红外)EFVS图像在飞行员飞行和飞行员监控hud上的结合方法,当他们接近跑道时,有和没有着陆区和中心线灯。此外,还评估了在极低能见度进近和着陆操作中,在双传感器EFVS图像中添加SV对机组飞行性能、工作量和态势感知的影响。结果表明,所有飞行的EFVS概念都在没有任何工作量损失的情况下获得了出色的进近路径跟踪和着陆性能。将SV图像添加到EFVS概念提供了态势感知改进,但在飞行路径维护方面没有明显的改进。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing Dual-Sensor Enhanced Flight Vision Systems to Enable Equivalent Visual Operations
Flight deck-based vision system technologies, such as Synthetic Vision (SV) and Enhanced Flight Vision Systems (EFVS), may serve as a revolutionary crew/vehicle interface enabling technologies to meet the challenges of the Next Generation Air Transportation System Equivalent Visual Operations (EVO) concept - that is, the ability to achieve the safety of current-day Visual Flight Rules (VFR) operations and maintain the operational tempos of VFR irrespective of the weather and visibility conditions. One significant challenge lies in the definition of required equipage on the aircraft and on the airport to enable the EVO concept objective. A motion-base simulator experiment was conducted to evaluate the operational feasibility, pilot workload and pilot acceptability of conducting straight-in instrument approaches with published vertical guidance to landing, touchdown, and rollout to a safe taxi speed in visibility as low as 300 ft runway visual range by use of onboard vision system technologies on a Head-Up Display (HUD) without need or reliance on natural vision. Twelve crews evaluated two methods of combining dual sensor (millimeter wave radar and forward looking infrared) EFVS imagery on pilot-flying and pilot-monitoring HUDs as they made approaches to runways with and without touchdown zone and centerline lights. In addition, the impact of adding SV to the dual sensor EFVS imagery on crew flight performance, workload, and situation awareness during extremely low visibility approach and landing operations was assessed. Results indicate that all EFVS concepts flown resulted in excellent approach path tracking and touchdown performance without any workload penalty. Adding SV imagery to EFVS concepts provided situation awareness improvements but no discernible improvements in flight path maintenance.
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