Open Access
Design of Center-TRACON Automation System
Heinz Erzberger,Thomas J. Davis,Steven M. Green +2 more
- 01 Oct 1993
241
TL;DR: The Center-TRACON Automation System (CTAS) as discussed by the authors is a system for automated management and control of terminal area traffic, referred to as the CTAS, which consists of three types of integrated tools that provide computergenerated advisories for both en-route and terminal area controllers to guide them in managing and controlling arrival traffic efficiently.
read more
Abstract: A system for the automated management and control of terminal area traffic, referred to as the Center-TRACON Automation System (CTAS), is being developed at NASA Ames Research Center. In a cooperative program, NASA and FAA have efforts underway to install and evaluate the system at the Denver area and Dallas/Ft. Worth area air traffic control facilities. This paper will review CTAS architecture, and automation functions as well as the integration of CTAS into the existing operational system. CTAS consists of three types of integrated tools that provide computer-generated advisories for both en-route and terminal area controllers to guide them in managing and controlling arrival traffic efficiently. One tool, the Traffic Management Advisor (TMA), generates runway assignments, landing sequences and landing times for all arriving aircraft, including those originating from nearby feeder airports. TMA also assists in runway configuration control and flow management. Another tool, the Descent Advisor (DA), generates clearances for the en-route controllers handling arrival flows to metering gates. The DA's clearances ensure fuel-efficient and conflict free descents to the metering gates at specified crossing times. In the terminal area, the Final Approach Spacing Tool (FAST) provides heading and speed advisories that help controllers produce an accurately spaced flow of aircraft on the final approach course. Data bases consisting of several hundred aircraft performance models, airline preferred operational procedures, and a three dimensional wind model support the operation of CTAS. The first component of CTAS, the Traffic Management Advisor, is being evaluated at the Denver TRACON and the Denver Air Route Traffic Control Center. The second component, the Final Approach Spacing Tool, will be evaluated in several stages at the Dallas/Fort Worth Airport beginning in October 1993. An initial stage of the Descent Advisor tool is being prepared for testing at the Denver Center in late 1994. Operational evaluations of all three integrated CTAS tools are expected to begin at the two field sites in 1995.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Conflict resolution for air traffic management: a study in multiagent hybrid systems
TL;DR: The method models the aircraft and the manoeuvre as a hybrid control system and calculates the maximal set of safe initial conditions for each aircraft so that separation is assured in the presence of uncertainties in the actions of the other aircraft.
Conflict resolution for air traffic management : a study in mutiagent hybrid systems
C. Tomlin
- 01 Jan 1998
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a method to synthesize provably safe conflict resolution manoeuvres for free flight, in which aircraft choose their own optimal routes, altitudes, and velocities.
1K
FACET: Future ATM Concepts Evaluation Tool
TL;DR: The FACET (Future Air Traffic Concepts Evaluation Tool) as discussed by the authors is used to simulate environments in order to test and develop air traffic management concepts, including prototypes of airborne self-separation, decision support for direct routing, advanced traffic flow management techniques and the integration of the operation of space launch vehicles in U.S. airspace.
400
A probabilistic approach to aircraft conflict detection
TL;DR: An algorithm for decentralized conflict detection and resolution that generalizes potential fields methods for path planning to a probabilistic dynamic environment is proposed and validated using Monte Carlo simulations.
•Book
Flight to the Future: Human Factors in Air Traffic Control
Christopher D. Wickens,Anne Mavor,J. McGee +2 more
- 28 Feb 1997
TL;DR: This comprehensive volume focuses on balancing safety with the expeditious flow of air traffic, identifying lessons from past air accidents, and offers recommendations for evaluation the human role in automated air traffic control systems and for managing the introduction of automation into current facilities and operations.
301