Development of a high-precision ADS-B based conflictalerting system for operations in the airportenvironment; Development of a high-precision Automatic DependentSurveillance - Broadcast based conflict alerting system foroperations in the airport environment
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The introduction of Automatic Dependent Surveillance
- Broadcast (ADS-B) as the future source of aircraft surveillance
worldwide provides an opportunity to introduce high-precision
airborne conflict alerting systems for operations in high-density
traffic environments. Current alerting systems have been very
successful at preventing mid-air collisions in the en-route
environment but have limited benefit in high-density environments
such as near airports where most mid-air collisions occur (59%).
Furthermore, introducing an ADS-B-enabled conflict alerting system
generates an incentive for General Aviation users to voluntarily
equip with ADS-B avionics. The work presented in this thesis
describes the process followed to develop an ADS-B-enabled,
high-precision conflict alerting system. This system will be the
basis for the international certification standard guiding future
implementations of such systems. The work was conducted as part of
the larger development effort of the Traffic Situation Awareness
with Alerting (TSAA) ADS-B application. As a first step, a set of
18 high-level system requirements was identified based on a
stakeholder analysis and review of mid-air collisions that occurred
over the last 10 years. An alerting algorithm was then developed
based on the system requirements that builds on the precedent set
by current alerting systems but takes advantage of the improved
state information available via ADS-B. The distinguishing factors
of the algorithm are its use of a constant turn rate trajectory
prediction and its consideration of the current and predicted
encounter geometry in the alerting decision. Next, a method to tune
the performance of the algorithm was developed and demonstrated.
The method applies the Latin hypercube sampling approach to
generate a large set of different algorithm implementations, which
were then evaluated by simulating the alerting performance on a
representative data set of airborne encounters. Lastly, the method
introduced an approach to evaluate and "visualize" the
five-dimensional performance space defined by the five performance
metrics of interest for alerting systems. Using the tuned
algorithm, a flight test program was conducted. The performance of
the algorithm during the flight test was analyzed in-depth and
compared to the expected performance. Given the insights from the
tuning and the flight test, additional alerting logic was
introduced to the basic algorithm, which significantly improved
overall alerting performance. The performance of the final system
implementation is significantly better or equal to that of the
current industry standard for all five performance metrics. The
nuisance and overall alert rate were each reduced by a factor of
more than 4 and the average time of alert before the closest point
of approach increased by 6 seconds as compared to current systems.
Enabled by this performance improvement, TSAA introduces reliable
collision alerting to the Airport Environment where most of today's
mid-air collisions occur and where today's alerting systems…