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INVESTIGATION ON THE EFFECTS OF AIRPORT ATFM RESTRICTIONS. Thomas Günther Prof. Dr.-Ing. Hartmut Fricke ICRAT 2004 Zilina, 23.11.04. Content. Background & motivation Computer-aided model Investigation & results Conclusions Institute of Aviation, Dresden. Investigation background.
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INVESTIGATION ON THE EFFECTS OF AIRPORT ATFM RESTRICTIONS Thomas Günther Prof. Dr.-Ing. Hartmut Fricke ICRAT 2004 Zilina, 23.11.04
Content • Background & motivation • Computer-aided model • Investigation & results • Conclusions • Institute of Aviation, Dresden
Investigation background • ATFM (Air Traffic Flow Management) objectives: • improve safety by avoiding overloads of sectors and controllers • enable an optimum traffic flow within the airspace • in Europe provided by the CFMU (Central Flow Management Unit) • comparison of the demand forecast with capacities of each ATC sector and airport ATFM restrictions if demand exceeds capacity • all flights concerned with this restriction will be delayed at their departure airport (slot allocation)
Motivation • most penalizing airport: Frankfurt Main (more than 1 million minutes of ATFM delay in 2003, much more than any other European airport) • 2nd: Roma Fiumicino: 610 000 minutes ATFM delay in 2003 • 3rd: London Heathrow: 590 000 minutes ATFM delay in 2003 • En-route ATFM delays decreased since 1999 by about 75% Airport ATFM delays are becoming more important nowadays
Computer-aided model Requested inputs: Scheduled Times of Arrival, … ETA generation (propability distribution) Modeling of the slot allocation process Discrepancies between regulated and actual demand Modeling of the arrival sequencing process Actual Times of Arrival, arrival demand & flow, ...
Investigation • Investigation on ATFM restrictions at Frankfurt Main Airport: • declared capacity of 43 (45) arrivals/h in 2003 • in case of poor weather conditions explicit lower capacity (CAT II/III conditions: about 35 arrivals per hour) • investigation on the effects with and without ATFM restrictions
Results:Effects on actual demand Simulation of a regulated demand of 35 arrivals/h between 7:00 and 8:00: actual demand decreases within the period of ATFM restriction after cancellation of the restriction the demand increases (late arrivals) a too early applied restriction may lead to negative effects (flights are pushed into the critical period) ATFM restriction
Results:Effects on airborne delay Simulation of a maximum arrival rate of 35 per h between 7:00 and 8:00: airborne delay can be reduced by implementing ATFM restrictions communication and surveillance workload for the controllers can be reduced safety is improved by avoiding overload of airspace and controllers
Results:Effects on punctuality Simulation of a maximum arrival rate of 35 per h between 7:00 and 8:00: punctuality is decreased by the application of Airport ATFM restrictions reduction of airborne delay is always less than subsequent increase of ATFM delay reason: better runway throughput without ATFM restrictions
Conclusions • Airport ATFM restrictions need to be applied to ensure safety if a capacity reduction or excessive demand may lead to significant airspace congestion. • To maintain a tolerable punctuality a good balance between ATFM restrictions and the use of available holding stacks has to be achieved. • Objective of Airport ATFM restrictions: • NOT to avoid holding! • Maintain safety requirements while keeping airborne holding at a manageable and efficient level Ground Holding Safe and efficient balance Airborne Holding
Institute of Aviation, Dresden • Director of the institute: Professor Hartmut Fricke • young team (9 assistants) of aviation experts and engineers • key aspects of research: • Air Transport Infrastructure Planning • Air Transport System Technologies • Optimizing Ground Handling and Passenger Flow Processes • Capacity Analysis: Correlating Capacity and Safety