LIST OF TABLES
Table III-1 Operational Route Definitions................................................................................III-6
Table III-2 Baseline Traffic Definitions...................................................................................III-7
Table III-3 Levels of Turbulence Encountered along Routes...................................................III-9
Table III-4 Resulting Lumping of Turbulence Levels Based on Focused Interview Results.III-10
Table III-5 Details and Rationale for CAT Sensor Range Evaluated.....................................III-12
SYMBOLS AND ABBREVIATIONS
APMS Aviation Performance Measuring System
APRAM Aircraft Performance Risk Assessment Model
ARTCC Air Route Traffic Control Center
ASRS Aviation Safety Reporting System
ATC Air Traffic Control
CAT Clear-Air Turbulence
CEM Controller, Event, and Measurement
CY Calendar Year
DLL Dynamic Linked Library
DMSO Defense Modeling and Simulation Office
ECAD Environmental Controller and Database
EST Eastern Standard Time
ETMS Enhanced Traffic Management System
FAA Federal Aviation Administration
FL Flight Level
FMS Flight Management System
FOQA Flight Operations Quality Assurance
HLA High-Level Architecture
HPM Human Performance Model
I/O Input/Output
KB Kilobytes
kts knots (nautical miles per hour)
LIDAR Light Detection and Ranging
LIJOS LISP Implementation of Java Object Stream
MB Megabytes
MIDAS Man-machine Integration Design and Analysis System
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology
NAS National Airspace System
NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration
nm Nautical Miles
PIREP Pilot Report
RAM Random Access Memory
RFS Reconfigurable Flight Simulator
RTI Run-Time Interface
SJSU San Jose State University
SOM Symbolic Operator Model
UCB University of California at Berkeley
UWR Updateable World Representation
SUMMARY
This report constitutes the final report for Calendar Year 2001 (CY01) under Contract Number NAS2-99072 for the third year of a three-year research project entitled “Development of Fast-Time Simulation Techniques to Model Safety Issues in the National Airspace System.” The objective of this research is to investigate and develop techniques to enable NAS fast-time simulation modeling to be useful for conducting safety analysis. The research efforts focus on examining the type of safety issues that could be appropriately modeled by fast-time simulations and developing, testing, and demonstrating human behavioral modules and data analysis routines that would need to be incorporated into fast-time simulations in order to predict the safety effects of changes in procedures or technologies and to support risk assessment.
中国航空网 www.aero.cn
航空翻译 www.aviation.cn
本文链接地址:DEVELOPMENT OF FAST-TIME SIMULATION TECHNIQUES IN THE NATION(4)