Terminal area flight path generation using parallel constraint propagation
Author(s)
Sadoune, Michel
DownloadFTL_R_1989_01.pdf (11.37Mb)
Other Contributors
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Flight Transportation Laboratory
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A Flight Path Generator is defined as the module of an automated Air Traffic Control system which plans aircraft trajectories in the terminal area with respect to operational constraints. The flight path plans have to be feasible and must not violate separation criteria. The problem of terminal area trajectory planning is structured by putting the emphasis on knowledge representation and air-space organization. A welldefined and expressive semantics relying on the use of flexible patterns is designed to represent aircraft motion and flight paths. These patterns are defined so as to minimize the need for replanning and to smoothly accommodate operational deviations. Flight paths are specified by an accumulation of constraints. A parallel, asynchronous implementation of a computational model based on the propagation of constraints provides mechanisms to efficiently build feasible flight path plans. A methodology for a fast and robust conflict detection between flight path plans is introduced. It is based on a cascaded filtering of the stream of feasible flight paths and combines the benefits of a symbolic representation and of numerical computation with a high degree of parallelism. The Flight Path Generator is designed with the goal of implementing a portable and evolving tool which could be inserted in controllers' routine with minimum disruption of present procedures. Eventually, a model of aircraft interaction provides a framework to rethink the notion of Separation Standards.
Description
Cover title May 1989 Also issued as an Ph.D. thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1989 Includes bibliographical references (p. 175-181)
Date issued
1989Publisher
[Cambridge, Mass. : Massachusetts Institute of Technology], Flight Transportation Laboratory, [1989]
Other identifiers
29339140
Series/Report no.
FTL report (Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Flight Transportation Laboratory) ; R89-1
Keywords
Air traffic control, Flight control, Trajectory optimization, Parallel processing (Electronic computers), Automation, Mathematical models