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Air Traffic Management. Calie Giangi. Agenda. Introduction to ATC Purpose Basic Services Generic Elements Airspace ATC Structure ATC Operations Future of ATC. Air Traffic Control (ATC). Also known as air traffic management (ATM)
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Air Traffic Management Calie Giangi
Agenda • Introduction to ATC • Purpose • Basic Services • Generic Elements • Airspace • ATC Structure • ATC Operations • Future of ATC
Air Traffic Control (ATC) • Also known as air traffic management (ATM) • The purpose of ATC is to ensure the safe and efficient flow of air traffic
Four Basic Services • Separation assurance – ATC controllers are responsible for keeping aircrafts separated from each other, as well as from other hazards such as terrain or wake vortices • Flight information – provide weather and airport condition updates • Search and rescue – notifying and alerting proper agencies about an aircraft in need • Congestion management – organizing traffic flows into congested airports and airspace
Generic Elements of ATC System • Communications System • Commands/clearances are issued to aircrafts • Voice radio channels • Network of ground stations • Range is limited to 100 nautical miles • XM/Sirius are used to send non-aircraft-specific data
Generic Elements of ATC System • Navigation Systems • ATC controllers ensure aircrafts fly a cleared route • En route • Long-range coverage • VHF omnidirectional range system (VOR system) • Limited to line of sight communication • Stations located at/near airports or on high ground • Approach • Higher precision required • Runway classification: non-instrument (visual) vs. instrument
Generic Elements of ATC System • Surveillance Systems • ATC controller observes and monitors traffic situations • Position reporting – crew communicates its position • Radar – currently used for most domestic systems • Primary Radars – measure range by the round-trip time of an interrogation pulse reflected off of the aircraft • Secondary Radars – aircraft is equipped with a transponder which receives and transmits an interrogation pulse along with an ID code for the responding aircraft (ATC Radar Beacon System) • Direction (antenna) and altitude (ATCRBS) are also measured
Generic Elements of ATC System • Flight and Weather Information Systems • Flight plans are managed in a central flight data processing system, distributed to various ATC facilities • Increasing number of computer-based decision support tools are being developed to help controllers optimize the flow of traffic • Current conditions provided to pilots and ATC controllers • Extensive weather information systems generate and distribute • general and airport-specific forecasts and observations • winds aloft forecasts • hazardous weather alerts • pilot reports (PIREPS)
Airspace • Controlled • Traffic is supervised and managed by ATC • Uncontrolled • Aircrafts not directly managed by ATC • Military operations • Airspace is reserved for military • Civilian aircrafts are prohibited from entering or require permission from military authorities before using it
ATC Structure • Ground Control • Manages aircraft and other vehicles on airport surface as they taxi to/from the runway • Tower Control • Manages take off and landing • Radius of about 5 miles from the airport and 2500-3000 ft high • Terminal Airspace Control • Manages descent, initial approach, and departure phases • En route/Center Control • Manages traffic above and between terminal airspace • Oceanic/International Airspace • Managed by International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
ATC Operations • Human-centered contract process • Controllers and flight crews negotiate for access to airport or airspace resources • ATC controller observes traffic situation through surveillance system • Controller issues commands to aircraft • Standard Operating Procedures • Altitude (east vs. west) • Holding patterns to delay aircraft in air when high traffic makes it difficult to move to the next sector • Priority for and equity of service (usually FCFS) • Emergencies/Equipment failures
Future of ATC Systems • Not much room for growth in US • Early plans include • Increased use of satellite navigation systems • Surveillance systems based on ADS-B • Use of time as a control parameter in trajectory-based clearances • Broad information sharing through system-wide information management • Moving controllers to a more supervisory role and shifting some ATC functions to the cockpit