Unifying Tactical Conflict Prevention, Detection, and Resolution Methods in Non-Orthogonal Constrained Urban Airspace
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Published:2023-04-30
Issue:5
Volume:10
Page:423
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ISSN:2226-4310
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Container-title:Aerospace
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Aerospace
Author:
Badea Călin Andrei1ORCID, Morfin Veytia Andres1ORCID, Patrinopoulou Niki2ORCID, Daramouskas Ioannis2, Ellerbroek Joost1ORCID, Lappas Vaios3ORCID, Kostopoulos Vassilios2, Hoekstra Jacco1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Control and Simulation, Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Kluyverweg 1, 2629 HS Delft, The Netherlands 2. Department of Mechanical Engineering and Aeronautics, University of Patras, 26504 Patras, Greece 3. Department of Aerospace Science & Technology, National Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10563 Athens, Greece
Abstract
The use of small aircraft for a wide range of missions in urban airspace is expected to increase in the future. In Europe, efforts have been invested into developing a unified system, called U-space, to manage aircraft in dense very-low-level urban airspace. The Metropolis II project aimed to research what degree of centralisation an air traffic management system should use in such airspace. The paper at hand is a follow-up, and investigates improvements that can be brought to the tactical conflict prevention, detection, and resolution module of such a system in order to harmonise these components with an organic high-density U-space environment. The proposed improvements are: the prioritisation of vertical conflict prevention in intersections, the use of intent in detecting and resolving conflicts, and the use of heading-based manoeuvres in open airspace. Results show that the use of intent information in the conflict detection process, as well as the implementation of suitable tactical prevention procedures, can greatly increase airspace safety. Furthermore, the experiments revealed that the effectiveness of conflict resolution algorithms is highly dependent on the airspace rules and structure. This reiterates the potential for increasing the safety and efficiency of operations within constrained airspace if the tactical separation modules are unified with the other components of air traffic management systems for U-space.
Subject
Aerospace Engineering
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