2006
DOI: 10.2514/atcq.14.1.5
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Safety Analysis for Advanced Separation Concepts

Abstract: Aviation planners have called for increasing the capacity of the air transportation system by factors of two or three over the next 20 years.

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Cited by 31 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…The first used a fault tree approach to study four fault types: (1) nominal conditions, (2) information fault non-conformance, (3) control fault non-conformance, and (4) service interruption. 6 Results of this study suggest AAC could achieve the safety levels expected in 20-30 years given the deployment of appropriately designed safety features. Although risk estimates can be computed quickly using the fault tree method, it does not facilitate component-level model fidelity because the number of conditional probabilities and failure modes grows exponentially.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 78%
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“…The first used a fault tree approach to study four fault types: (1) nominal conditions, (2) information fault non-conformance, (3) control fault non-conformance, and (4) service interruption. 6 Results of this study suggest AAC could achieve the safety levels expected in 20-30 years given the deployment of appropriately designed safety features. Although risk estimates can be computed quickly using the fault tree method, it does not facilitate component-level model fidelity because the number of conditional probabilities and failure modes grows exponentially.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…7,13 ), then TCAS fails and there is a 30% chance that pilots will not be able to visually detect and avoid the NMAC. 6 In that case, there is a 28% chance of collision. Onboard speaker (AC1) N/A (same as S1 above) S2…”
Section: Tcas and Pilot Visual Avoidancementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The safety of ground-based automated separation was the subject of a recent study 7 that presented a preliminary fault-tree analysis of the effect of some system faults on the safety of a centralized separation system. The analysis did not consider system uncertainties or performance degradation, nor did it consider prediction errors.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The automation is designed to detect conflicts between aircraft and generate conflict resolution routes and conflict-free maneuvering advisories 7,8,9 . Until now, safety evaluation of SA applications has, for the most part, been based on studies using simulation tools that seldom include models of system uncertainties 10,11,12 and often make many simplifying assumptions such as perfect navigation performance and absence of prediction errors or off-nominal conditions. Analytical and numerical approaches to the analysis of safety using uncertainty propagation models often require many simplifying assumptions to keep the size of the models manageable or computation time within reasonable limits 13 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%