Title: ATM Communications Navigation and Surveillance
1ATM Communications Navigation and Surveillance
- SYST 460 560
- Fall 2003
- G.L. Donohue
2Evolution of CNS/ATM
ADS-B GPS
1935, an airline consortium opened the first
Airway Traffic Control Station
1922 ATC begins
1940s Impact of radar
1930 Control Tower
Airway Centers
1960s 70s
Page 11-15 Katon, Fried
3Radio Frequencies
Name Abbreviation Frequency Frequency Wave length
Very low VLF 3 to 30 kHz 100 to 10km
Low LF 30 to 300 kHz 10 to 1km
Medium MF 300 to 3000 kHz 1km to 100 m
High HF 3 to 30 MHz 100 to 10m
Very high VHF 30 to 300 MHz 10 to 1cm
Ultrahigh UHF 300 to 3000 MHz 1m to 10cm
Super high SHF 3 to 30 GHz 10 to 1cm
Extremely high EHF 30 to 300 GHz 10 to 1mm
4Line-of-Sight Waves
- VHF and UHF have about 70 nmi. Range at 6,000 ft.
altitude
Line-of-sight range
5Weather
- Instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) are
weather conditions in which visibility is
restricted, typically less than 3 miles - Acft operating in IMC are supposed to fly under
IFR
6Visibility Categories (by ICAO) (1)
- Category I
- Decision height not lower than 200 ft visibility
not less than 2600 ft, or Runway Visual Range
(RVR) not less than 1800 ft with appropriate
runway lighting. - The pilot must have visual reference to the
runway at the 200ft DH above the runway or abort
the landing. - Acft require ILS and marker-beacon receiver
beyond other requirements for flights under IFR. - Category I approaches are performed routinely by
pilots with instrument ratings
7Visibility Categories (by ICAO) (2)
- Category II
- DH not lower than 100 ft RVR not less than 1200
ft (350m) - The pilot must see the runway above the DH or
abort the landing - Additional equipment that acft must carry include
dual ILS receivers, either a radar altimeter or
an inner-marker receiver to measure the DH, an
autopilot coupler or dual flight directors, two
pilots, rain-removal equipment (wipers or
chemicals), and missed-approach attitude
guidance. An auto-throttle system also may be
required
8Visibility Categories (by ICAO) (3)
- Category III subdivided into
- IIIA. DH lower than 100 ft and RVR not less than
700 ft (200m)-sometimes called see to land it
requires a fail-passive autopilot or a head-up
display - IIIB. DH low than 50 ft RVR not less than 150
ft (50m)-sometimes called see to taxi it
requires a fail-operational autopilot an
automatic rollout to taxing speed - IIIC. Zero visibility. No DH or RVR limits. It
has not been approved anywhere in the world
9Decision Height
- Acfts are certified for decision heights, as are
crews - When a crew lands an acft at an airport, the
highest of the three DHs applies. - An abort at the DH is based on visibility
- Alert height is the altitude below which landing
may continue in case of equipment failure - Typical Alert height is 100 ft
10Integrated Avionics Subsystems (1)
- Navigation
- Communication
- intercom among the crew members one or more
external two-way voice data links - Flight control
- Stability augmentation autopilot
- The former points the airframe controls its
oscillations - The latter provides such functions as
attitude-hold, heading-hold, altitude hold - Engine control
- The electronic control of engine thrust(throttle
management)
11Integrated Avionics Subsystems (2)
- Flight management
- Stores the coordinates of en-route waypoints and
calculates the steering signals to fly toward
them - Subsystem monitoring control
- Displays faults in all subsystems and recommends
actions to be taken - Collision-avoidance
- Predicts impending collision with other acft or
the ground recommends an avoidance maneuver
12Integrated Avionics Subsystems (3)
- Weather detection
- Observes weather ahead of the acft so that the
route of flight can be alerted to avoid
thunderstorms areas of high wind shears - Sensors are usually radar and laser
- Emergency locator transmitter(ELT)
- Is triggered automatically on high-g impact or
manually - Emit distinctive tones on 121.5, 243, and 406 MHz
13The Vehicle
Avionics Placement on multi-purpose transport
14Architecture (1)
- Displays
- Present information from avionics to the pilot
- Information consists of vertical and horizontal
navigation data, flight-control data (e.g. speed
and angle of attack), and communication data
(radio frequencies)
15Architecture (2)
- Flight controls
- The means of inputting information from the pilot
to the avionics - Traditionally consists of rudder pedals and a
control-column or stick - Switches are mounted on the control column,
stick, throttle, and hand-controllers
16Architecture (3)
- Computation
- The method of processing sensor data
- Two extreme organizations exist
- Centralized Data from all sensors are collected
in a bank of central computer in which software
from several subsystems are intermingled - Decentralized Each traditional subsystem retains
its integrity
17Architecture (4)
- Data buses
- Copper or fiber-optics paths among sensors,
computers, actuators, displays, and controls - Safety partitioning
- Commercial acft sometimes divide the avionics to
- Highly redundant safety-critical flight-control
system - Dually redundant ,mission-critical
flight-management system - Non-redundant maintenance system
- Military acrft sometimes partition their avionics
for reason other than safety
18Architecture (5)
- Environment
- Avionics equipment are subject to
- acft-generated electricity-power transient, whose
effects are reduced by filtering and batteries, - externally generated disturbances from radio
transmitters, lightening, and high-intensity
radiated fields - The effect of external disturbances are reduced
by - shielding metal wires and by using fiberoptic
data buses - add a Faraday shielding to meal skin of the acft
19Architecture (6)
- Standards
- Navaid signals in space are standardized by ICAO
- Interfaces among airborne subsystems, within the
acft, are standardized by Aeronautical Radio INC.
(ARINC), Annapolis Maryland, a nonprofit
organization owned by member airlines - Other Standards are set by
- Radio Technical Commissions for Aeronautics,
Washington DC - European Organization for Civil Aviation
Equipment (EUROCAE) - etc.
20Human Navigator
- Large acft often had (before 1970) a third crew
member, flight engineer - To operate engines and acft subsystems e.g. air
conditioning and hydraulics) - Use celestial fixes for positioning
- Production of cockpits with inertial, doppler,
and radio equipments facilitated the
automatically stations selection,
position/waypoint steering calculations and
eliminated the number of cockpit crew to two or
one.
21Communications is the Glue for ATM-CNS
22Context for Communication Architecture
23Air-Ground Comm Functional Architecture
AIRBORNE WEATHER OBSERVATION
VOICE
OPERATIONS, MAINTENANCE
MESSAGING
AIRCRAFT
NEGOTIATION
AIRCRAFT
ADS-B
POSITION/ INTENT
AUTOMET
FIS TIS APAXS
AOC COMM
CPC
ADS-B
Commercial Service Provider
CPDLC
OTHER AUTHORIZED USERS
- INTERNATIONAL
- MILITARY
- FBOS
DSSDL
NWIS
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL
AIRLINES OPERATIONS CENTER
24Benefits Driven Concept
Aircraft
Technical Concepts
Range of User Equipage
Tactical Control
2-way
Human- based
Strategic CDM
DSS- based
Automated Negotiation
Broadcast
Info Base
Static Data
AOCDL
Air Traffic Control
Aeronautical Operational Control
25Functional Analysis
- 9 Technical Concepts
- Defined Message categories and message types for
each Technical Concept - Concept Description
- Concept Diagram
26Architecture Alternatives Summary
27Operational Concept - Tech Concept
28Message Categories
29Concept Description - Flight Information Service
- Aircraft continually receive dynamic Flight
Information to enable common situational
awareness - Weather Information
- NAS Status
- NAS Traffic Flow Status
- Note We assume that static data will be loaded
on aircraft via portable storage media prior to
flight.
30FIS Message Set
31Flight Information Service - FIS
Wx Sensor(s)
NAS / SUA STATUS
AAIS
ATIS
CSP
FIS PROC
Comm I/F
VDL RCVR
MFDS
OASIS
SAT COM RCVR
NWIS INTEGRATED NETWORK
WARP
SATCOM
UAT XCVR
Portable Storage Media
UAT
NEXRAD
NWS
Wx Vendor(s)
ADAS
Ground-Based Pilot PC
32Traffic Information Services TIS
Aircraft
Air / Ground Comm
Ground Systems
ADS-B Processor
ADS-B XCVR
ADS-B GND RCVR
A C N E T W O R K
VDL-B
VDL-B XCVR
Secondary
Primary
AAIS
SATCOM RCVR
SATCOM
Comm I/F
Automation
ATC Facility
UAT
33Controller / Pilot Data Link Communications CPDLC
ARTCC
Automation
Comm I/F
AAIS
MFDS
VDL-3 XCVR
TRACON
Automation
Comm I/F
TOWER
Automation
Comm I/F
FSS
Automation
Comm I/F
34CPC Controller/Pilot Voice Communication
VHF Voice Radio
Pilot Voice
Voice Switch
FTI Comm Network
Comm Head
ATC Voice
Existing A/G Radio
VDL Radio
Voice Data
NEXCOM RADIO
35Decision Support System Data Link DSSDL
ARTCC
Automation
Comm I/F
AAIS
A C N E T W O R K
VDL-3 XCVR
TRACON
Automation
Comm I/F
FMS
TOWER
Automation
Comm I/F
36Aeronautical Operational Control Data Link AOCDL
AOC
Comm
Automation
I/F
AAIS
CSP VDL-2 Comm Network
MFDS
VDL-2
XCVR
FMS
37AOCDL Message Set
38Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast
ADS-B
Aircraft
Air / Ground Comm
Ground Systems
AAIS
GPS
GPS RCVR
MFDS
A C N E T W O R K
Secondary
Primary
ADS-B GND RCVR
FMS
ADS-B XCVR
ADS-B
Comm I/F
Automation
ATC Facility
39Automated Meteorological Transmission - AUTOMET
Wx Sensor(s)
NASA
UAT XCVR
AOC
CSP
FMS
PROC
Comm I/F
VDL XCVR
NWS
FSL
SAT COM XCVR
SATCOM
40Data Link Summary
41Top Down Architecture -
Primary 2-way CPC / CPDLC / DSSDL
VDL-3
NEXCOM Site
FTI Network
Secondary 2-way AOC / AUTOMET
VDL-2
CSP Network
CSP Interface
SATCOM
CSP Network
FTI Network
FIS / TIS / APAXS
Data Transmit ADS-B
UAT VDL-4 Mode-S
ADS-B Site
FTI Network
Aircraft
Ground
Link
422007 Architecture - UAT Data
Ground
Link
Aircraft
VHF-AM
NEXCOM Site
FTI Network
CPC - Voice
Secondary 2-way CPDLC / DSSDL AOC / AUTOMET
VDL-2
CSP Network
CSP Interface
VDL-B
FIS - Regional
CSP Network
FTI Network
UAT
FIS / TIS
Data Transmit ADS-B
ADS-B Site
FTI Network
SATCOM
CSP Network
APAXS
43 Communication Architecture Schedule - FIS
00
10
11
12
13
14
15
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
09
08
Integrated Demo
Research
SATCOM Ant / Rcvr
Standards
FIS-B SATCOM
FIS-B
Avionics
UAT
Systems
FIS-B
SATCOM
FIS-B SATCOM
FIS-B
Certification
FIS Data Compression
Research
Link Simulation
Standards
Air-Ground Comm
Systems (data links)
VDL-B
UAT
V- SATCOM
Research
NAS Wide Info System
NWIS Data
Standards
Ground-Comm
AOC / CDM Network
Systems
WARP Wx Network
FTI
NWIS
System Operational time span
44Communication Architecture Schedule - TIS
00
10
11
12
13
14
15
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
09
08
Integrated Demo
Research
SATCOM Ant / Rcvr
Standards
Avionics
UAT
Systems
VDL-B
SATCOM
Certification
TIS Data Compression
Research
Link Simulation
Standards
Systems (data links)
Air-Ground Comm
UAT
VDL-B
SATCOM
V- SATCOM
Research
NAS Wide Info System
NWIS Data
Standards
Ground-Comm
AOC / CDM Network
Systems
FTI
NWIS
System Operational time span
45Communication Architecture Schedule - CPDLC
00
10
11
12
13
14
15
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
09
08
Research
Demo
Standards
Avionics
Systems
VDL-2 MMR
VDL-3 MMR
Certification
Research
Prioritization of HzWx on VDL-2
Standards
Systems (data links)
Air-Ground Comm
VDL-2
VDL-3
Research
NAS Wide Info System
Standards
Ground-Comm
DLAP
Systems
DLAP -R
FTI
NWIS
System Operational time span
46Communication Architecture Schedule - AOCDL
System Operational time span
47Communication Architecture Schedule - ADS-B
00
10
11
12
13
14
15
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
09
08
Research
Standards
Avionics
Systems
Mode-S / UAT / VDL-4
Certification
Research
Standards
Systems (data links)
Technology Link Decision
Air-Ground Comm
Mode-S
UAT
VDL-4
Research
NAS Wide Info System
NWIS Data
Standards
Ground-Comm
Systems
FTI
NWIS
System Operational time span
48Communication Architecture Schedule -
Cross-cutting
00
10
11
12
13
14
15
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
09
08
Research
NAS Wide Info System
Cross-cutting
Standards
Systems (data links)
Mode-S
VHF-AM
UAT
VDL-B
Air-Ground Comm
VDL-2
C, Ku, S SATCOM
VDL-3
SATCOM
V- SATCOM
Systems
FTI
AOC / CDM Network
Ground-Comm
WARP Wx Network
NWIS
System Operational time span
49Cross Cutting Technology Gaps
50Navigation
51Navigation Geometry of The Earth
- For navigational purposes, the earths surface
can be represented by an ellipsoid of rotation
around the Earths spin axis - The size shape of the best-fitting ellipsoid is
chosen to match the sea-level equal-potential
surface.
52Geometry of The Earth
Fig 2.2
Median section of the earth, showing the
reference ellipsoid gravity field
53Coordinate Frames
- The position, velocity and attitude of the
aircraft must be expressed in a coordinate frame
WGS-84
Navigation coordinate frame
54Navigation Phases
Picture courtesy of MITRE Corporation
55Aircraft System Hierarchy
Time to go Range, bearing to displays,
FMS Steering signals to autopilot
56Terminal Area Navigation
- Departure begins from maneuvering out the
runway, ends when acft leaves the
terminal-control area - Approach acft enters the terminal area, ends
when it intercepts the landing aid at an approach
fix - Standard Instrument Departure (SIDs) Standard
Terminal Approach Route (STARs) - Vertical navigation? Barometric sensors
- Heading vectors ? Assigned by traffic controller
57En Route Navigation
- Leads from the origin to the destination and
alternate destinations - Airways are defined by navaids over the land and
by lat/long over water fixes - The width of airways and their lateral separation
depends on the quality of the navigation system - From 1990s use of GPS has allowed precise
navigation - In the US en-route navigation error must be less
than 2.8 nm over land 12 nm over ocean
58Approach Navigation
- Begins at acquisition of the landing aid until
the airport is in sight or the acrft is on the
runway, depending on the capabilities of the
landing aid - Decision height (DH) altitude above the runway
at which the approach must be aborted if the
runway is not in sight - The better the landing aids, the lower the the DH
- DHs are published for each runway at each airport
- An acrft executing a non precision approach must
abort if the runway is not visible at the minimum
descent altitude (typically700 ft above the
runway)
59Landing Navigation
- Begins at the DH ends when the acrf exits the
runway - Navigation may be visual or navigational sets
may be coupled to a autopilot - A radio altimeter measures the height of the main
landing gear above the runway for guiding the
flare - The rollout is guided by the landing aid (e.g.
the ILS localizer)
60Missed Approach
- Is initiated at the pilots option or at the
traffic controllers request, typically because
of poor visibility. And alignment with the runway - The flight path and altitude profile are
published - Consists of a climb to a predetermined holding
fix at which the acrf awaits further instructions - Terminal area navaids are used
61VHF Omnidirectional Range(VOR)
- Receiver characteristics
- The airborne equipment comprises a horizontally
polarized receiving antenna a receiver. This
receiver detects the 30 Hz amplitude modulation
produced by the rotating pattern compares it
with the 30 Hz frequency-modulated reference. - Fig 4.16
62Doppler VOR
- Doppler VOR applies the principles of wide
antenna aperture to the reduction of site error - The solution used in US by FAA involves a 44-ft
diameter circle of 52 Alford loops, together with
a single Alfrod loop in the center - Reference phase?The central Alford loop radiates
an omni-directional continuous wave that is
amplitude modulated at 30 Hz - The circle of 52 Alford loops is fed by a
capacitive commutator so as to simulate the
rotation of a single antenna at a radius of 22ft - Rotation is at 30rps, a carrier frequency 9960
Hz higher than that in the central antenna is fed
to the commutator - With 44-ft diameter a rotation speed of 30
rps, the peripheral speed is on the order of 1400
meters per second, or 480 wavelengths per second
at VOR radio frequencies
63Distance-Measuring Equipment (DME) (1)
- DME is a internationally standard pulse-ranging
system for acft, operating in the 960 to 1215 MHz
band. In the US in 1996, there were over 4600
sets in use by scheduled airlines and about
90,000 sets by GA
DME Operation
64Distance-Measuring Equipment (DME) (2)
- The acft interrogator transmits pulses on one of
126 frequencies, spaced 1 MHz apart, in the 1025
to 1150 MHz band. Paired pulses are used in
order to reduce interference from other pulse
systems. The ground beacon(transponder) receives
these pulses after a 50 ?sec fixed delay,
retransmits them back to the acft. The airborne
automatically compares the elapsed time between
transmission and reception, subtracts out the
fixed 50 sec delay, displays the result on a
meter calibrated in nautical miles.
65Hyperbolic Systems
- Named after the hyperbolic lines of position
(LOP) that they produce rather than the circles - Loran-C
- Omega
- Decca
- Chayka
Measure the time-difference between the signal
from two or more transmitting station
Measure the phase-difference between the signal
transmitted from pairs of stations
66Long-Range Navigation(Loran)
- A hyperbolic radio-navigation system beginning
before outbreak of WW II - Uses ground waves at low frequencies, thereby
securing an operating range of over 1000 mi,
independent of line of sight - Uses pulse technique to avoid sky-wave
contamination - A hyperbolic system?it is not subject to the site
errors of point-source systems - Uses a form of cycle (phase) measurements to
improve precision - All modern systems are of the Loran-C variety
67Long-Range Navigation (Loran-C)
- Is a low-frequency radio-navigation aid operating
in the radio spectrum of 90 to 110 kHz - Consists of at least three transmitting stations
in groups forming chains - Using a Loran-C receiver, a user gets location
information by measuring the very small
difference in arrival times of the pulses for
each Master -Secondary pair - Each Master-Secondary pair measurement is a time
difference. One time difference is a set of
points that are, mathematically, a hyperbola.
Therefore, position is the intersection of two
hyperbolas. Knowing the exact location of the
transmitters and the pulse spacing, it is
possible to convert Loran time difference
information into latitude and longitude
68Loran-C (2)
Signal shape
Position determination
69Loran-C (2)
70NAVSTAR Global Positioning System
- GPS was conceived as a U.S. Department of Defense
(DoD) multi-service program in 1973, bearing some
resemblance to consisting of the best elements
of two predecessor development programs - The U.S. Navys TIMATION program
- The U.S. Air Forces program
- GPS is a passive, survivable, continuous,
space-based system that provides any suitably
equipped user with highly accurate
three-dimensional position, velocity, and time
information anywhere on or near the earth
71Principles of GPS System Operation
- GPS is basically a ranging system, although
precise Doppler measurements are also available - To provide accurate ranging measurements, which
are time-of-arrival measurements, very accurate
timing is required in the satellite. (tlt3 nsec) - GPS satellite contain redundant atomic frequency
standards - To provide continues 3D navigation solutions to
dynamic users, a sufficient number of satellite
are required to provide geometrically spaced
simultaneous measurements. - To provide those geometrically spaced
simultaneous measurements on a worldwide
continues basis, relatively high-altitude
satellite orbits are required
72GPS Satellite System Configuration
- Consists of three segments
- Space segment
- Control segment
- User segment
73GPS System Configuration
74General System Characteristics
- The GPS satellites are in approximately 12 hour
orbits(11 hours, 57 minutes, and 57.27 seconds)
at an altitude of approximately 11,000 nmi - The total number of satellite in the
constellation has changed over the years 24 - Each satellite transmits signals at two
frequencies at L-Band to permit ionosphere
refraction corrections by properly equipped users
75General System Characteristics
- The GPS satellites are in approximately 12 hour
orbits(11 hours, 57 minutes, and 57.27 seconds)
at an altitude of approximately 11,000 nmi - The total number of satellite in the
constellation has changed over the years 24 - Each satellite transmits signals at two
frequencies at L-Band to permit ionosphere
refraction corrections by properly equipped users
76The GPS segments
Segments Input Function Product
Space Satellite commands Navigation messages Provide atomic time scale Generate PRN RF signals Store forward navigation message PRN RF signals Navigation message Telemetry
Control PRN RF signals Telemetry Universal coordinated Time(UTC) Estimate time ephemeris Predict time ephemeris Manage space assets Navigation message Satellite commands
User PRN RF signals Navigation messages Solve navigation equations Position, velocity, time
77GPS Space Segment
- The space segment is comprised of the satellite
constellation made up of multiple satellites. The
satellite provides the basic navigation frame of
reference and transmit the radio signals from
which the user can collect measurements required
for his navigation solution - Knowledge of the satellites position and time
history (ephemeris and time) is also required for
the users solutions. - The satellite also transmit that information via
data modulation of the signals
- CDMA _at_ 1.2 to 1.5 GHz
- LB and P C
- Very accurate atomic clocks lt nanosecond
78GPS Control Segment
- Consists of three major elements
- Monitor stations that track the satellites
transmitted signals collect measurements
similar to those that the user collect for their
navigation - A master control station that uses these
measurements to determine predict the
satellites ephemeris time history and
subsequently to upload parameters that the
satellite modulate on the transmitted signals - Ground station antennas that perform the upload
control of the satellite
79User Segment
- Is comprised of the receiving equipment and
processors that perform the navigation solution - These equipments come in a variety of forms and
functions, depending upon the navigation
application
80Basics of Satellite Radio Navigation (1)
- Different types of user equipments solve a basic
set of equations for their solutions, using the
ranging and/or range rate (or change in range)
measurements as input to a least-squares, or a
Kalman filter algorithm. - Fig 5.2
Ranging satellite radio-navigation solution
81Basics of Satellite Radio Navigation (2)
- The measurements are not range range rate (or
change in range), but quantities described as
pseudorange pseudorange rate (or change in
pseudorange). This is because they consisit of
errors, dominated by timing errors, that are part
of the solution. For example, if only ranging
type measurements are made, the actual
measurement is of the form - is the measured peseudorange from
satellite i - is the geometric range to that satellite,
is the clock error in satellite i, is
the users clock error, c is the speed of light
and is the sum of various correctable
or uncorrectable measurements error
82Basics of Satellite Radio Navigation (3)
- Neglecting for the moment the clock and other
measurement errors, the range to satellite i is
given as - are the earth-centered, earth
fixed (ECEF) position components of the satellite
at the time of transmission and are
the ECEF user position components at that time
83Atmospheric Effects on Satellite Communication
- Ionosphere
- Shell of electrons and electrically charged atoms
molecules that surrounds the earth - Stretching from 50km to more than 1000km
- Result of ultraviolet radiation from sun
- Free electrons affect the propagation of radio
waves - At frequency below about 30 MHz acts like a
mirror bending the radio wave to the earth
thereby allowing long distance communication - At higher frequencies (satellite radio
navigation) radio waves pass through the
ionosphere
84System Accuracy
- GPS provides two positioning services, the
Precise Positioning Service (PPS) the Standard
Positioning Service (SPS) - The PPS can be denied to unauthorized users, but
SPS is available free of charge to any user
worldwide - Users that are crypto capable are authorized to
use crypto keys to always have access to the PPS.
These users are normally military users,
including NATO and other friendly countries.
These keys allow the authorized user to acquire
track the encrypted precise (P) code on both
frequencies to correct for international
degradation of the signal - WAAS lt 3 m horizontal
- lt 7.5 m vertical
- GPS ?15m
85Automatic Landing Systems (1)
- Air carrier acft that are authorized for
precision-approach below category II must have
automatic landing (auto-land) system. - Guidance control requirements by FAA
- For category II the coupled autopilot or crew
hold the acft within the vertical error of or-
12 ft at the 100ft height on a 3deg glide path - For category III the demonstrated touchdown
dispersions should be limited to 1500ft
longtudinally -or 27ft laterally
86Automatic Landing Systems (2)
- Flare Guidance
- During the final approach the glide-slope gain in
the auto-land system is reduced in a programmed
fashion. Supplementary sensors must supply the
vertical guidance below 100ft - Lateral Guidance
- Tracking of the localizer is aided by heading (or
integral-of-roll), roll, or roll-rate signals
supplied to the autopilot and by rate
acceleration data from on-board inertial system
87Instrument Landing System(ILS) (1)
- Is a collection of radio transmitting stations
used to guide acft to a specific runway. - In 1996 nearly 100 airports worldwide had at
least one runway certified to Category III with
ILS - More than one ILS in high density airports
- About 1500 ILSs are in use at airports throughout
the US
88Instrument Landing System(ILS) (2)
- ILS typically includes
- The localizer antenna is centered on the runway
beyond the stop end to provide lateral guidance - The glide slope antenna, located beside the
runway near the threshold to provide vertical
guidance - Marker beacons located at discrete positions
along the approach path to alert pilots of their
progress along the glide-path - Radiation monitors that, in case of ILS failure
alarm the control tower, may shut-down a Category
I or II ILS, or switch a Category III ILS to
backup transmitters
89ILS Guidance Signals (1)
- The localizer, glide slope, and marker beacons
radiate continues wave, horizontally polarized,
radio frequency, energy - The frequency bands of operation are
- Localizer, 40 channels from 108-112 MHz
- Glide slop, 40 channels from 329-335 MHz
- Marker beacons, all on a signal frequency of 75
MHz
90ILS Guidance Signals (2)
- The localizer establishes a radiation pattern in
space that provides a deviation signal in the
acft when it is displaced laterally from the
vertical plane containing the runway centerline - The deviation signal drives the left-right needle
of the pilots cross-pointer display may be
wired to the autopilot/flight-control system for
coupled approaches - The deviation signal is proportional to azimuth
angle usually out to 5 deg or more either side of
the center line
91ILS Guidance Signals (3)
Sum difference radiation patterns for the
course (CRS) clearance (CLR) signals of a
directional localizer array
92The Localizer (1)
- The typical localizer is an array usually located
600 to 1000 ft beyond the stop end antenna of the
runway - The array axis is perpendicular to the runway
center line
Log-periodic dipole antenna used in many
localizer arrays
93The Localizer (2)
Category IIIB localizer
94The Glide Slope (1)
- There are five different of glide-slope arrays in
common use three are image systems two are not - Image arrays depend on reflections from level
ground in the direction of approaching acft to
form the radiation pattern - The three image systems are null-referenced
system, with two antennas supported on a vertical
mast 14 28 ft above the ground plane - The sideband-reference system, with two antennas
7 and 22ft above the ground plane - The capture-effect system, with 3 antennas 14,
28, and 42 ft above the ground plane
95The Glide Slope(2)
Category IIIB capture-effect glideslope Tasker
transmissometer
96The Glide Slope (3)
Glide-slope pattern near the runway. DDM counters
are symmetrical around the vertical, but signal
strength drops rapidly off course
97The Glide Slope (4)
- The cable radiators of the end-fire array are
installed on stands 40 in. high are site
alongside the runway near desired touchdown point - Fig 13.10
- Fig 13.11
Front slotted-cable radiator of an end-fire glide
slope
Standard end-fire glide-slope system layout
98ILS Marker Beacons (1)
- Marker beacons provide pilot alerts along the
approach path - Each beacon radiates a fan-shaped vertical beam
that is approximately or- 40deg wide along the
glide path by -85deg wide perpendicular to the
path - The outer marker(OM) is placed under the approach
course near the point of glide-path intercept
it is modulated with two 400 Hz Morse-code dashed
per second
99ILS Accuracy Allocation
100Standard lighting Pattern
- Airports at which Category II landings are
permitted must be equipped with the standard
lighting pattern
Category III runway configuration
101The Mechanics of Landing (1)
- The approach
- Day night landings are permitted under visual
flight rules (VFR) when the ceiling exceeds 1000
ft the horizontal visibility exceeds 3 mi, as
juged by the airport control tower - In deteriorated weather, operations must be
conducted ubder Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) - An IFR approach is procedure is either
non-precision (lateral guidance only) or
precision (both lateral vertical guidance
signals) - Category I, II, and III operations are
precision-approach procedures
102The Mechanics of Landing (2)
- An afct landing under IFR must transition from
cruising flight to the final approach along the
extended runway center line by using the standard
approach procedures published for each airport - Approach altitudes are measured barometrically,
and the transition flight path is defined by
initial final approach fixes (IAF FAF) using
VOR, VOR/DME - Radar vectors may be given to the crew by
approach control
103The Mechanics of Landing (3)
- From approximately 1500 ft above runway, a
precision approach is guided by radio beams
generated by ILS. Large acft maintain a speed of
100 to 150 knots during descent along the glide
path beginning at the FAF (outer marker) - The glide-path angle is set by obstacle-clearance
and noise-abatement considerations with 3 deg as
the international civil standard - The sink rate is 6 to 16 ft/sec, depending on the
acfts speed on headwinds
104The Mechanics of Landing (4)
- The ICAO standard glide path will cross the
runway threshold at a height between 50 60 ft.
Thus, the projected glide path intercepts the
runway surface about 1000 ft from the threshold.
Wheel path for instrument landing of a jet acft
105Wide Area Augmentation System(WAAS)
- Developed by the FAA in parallel with European
Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service (EGNOS)
Japan MTSAT Satellite-Based Augmentation System - A safety-critical system consisting of a
signal-in-space a ground network to support
en-route through precision approach air
navigation - The WAAS augments GPS with three services all
phases of flight down to category I precision
approach - A ground integrity broadcast that will meet the
Required Navigation Performance (RNP) - Wide area differential GPS (WADGPS) corrections
that will provide accuracy for GPS users so as to
meet RNP accuracy requirements - A ranging function that will provide additional
availability reliability that will help satisfy
the RNP availability requirements
106WAAS Concept (1)
107WAAS Concept (2)
Inmarsat-3 four ocean-region deployment showing
5deg elevation contours
108WAAS Concept (3)
- Uses geostationary satellite to broadcast the
integrity correction data to users for all of
the GPS satellites visible to the WAAS network - A slightly modified GPS avionics receiver can
receive these broadcasts - Since the codes will be synchronized to the WAAS
network time, which is the reference time of the
WADGPS corrections, the signals can also be used
for ranging
109WAAS Concept (4)
- A sufficient number of GEOs provides enough
augmentation to satisfy RNP availability
reliability requirements - In the WAAS concept, a network of monitoring
stations (wide area reference stations, WRSs)
continuously track the GPS (GEO) satellite
rely the tracking information to a central
processing facility - Geo ? 2 minimum 4 desired
110WAAS Concept (5)
- The central processing facility (wide area master
station, WMS)m in turn, determines the health
WADGPS corrections for each signal in space
relays this information, via the broadcast
messages, to the ground earth station (GESs) for
uplink to the GEOs - The WMS also determines relays the GEO
ephemeris clock state messages to the GEOs
111Surveillance
112Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast
(ADS-B)
- A technology designed to address both airspace
and ground-based movement needs. - Collaborative decision making is possible through
ADS-B surveillance information available to both
ATC and aircrews. - ADS-B combined with predictable, repeatable
flight paths allow for increased airspace
efficiencies in high density terminal areas or
when weather conditions preclude visual
operations. - Additionally, ADS-B allow for enhanced ground
movement management (aircraft and vehicles) and
improved airside safety
113ADS-B
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