scholarly journals Plate Lines Reduce Lifetime of Wake Vortices During Final Approach to Vienna Airport

Author(s):  
Frank Holzaepfel ◽  
Anton Stephan ◽  
Grigory Rotshteyn
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
Vol 116 (1177) ◽  
pp. 287-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Vechtel

Abstract A flight simulator study has been carried out to evaluate the performance of modern flight control systems encountering curved wake vortices. During the decay process the shape of wake vortices alters significantly which has an influence on the encounter characteristics and thus on the encounter hazard. To analyse most realistic wake encounters, flow fields of matured vortices have been generated with large-eddy-simulations. These were used for the determination of induced force and moment histories during the encounter. The force and moment histories have been implemented into the equations of motions of a 6 DoF flight simulation. For the sake of comparison encounters have also been simulated with straight vortices as they were mostly used for many other investigations. The most important goal of the study was to analyse the difference between these ideally straight vortices and vortices with a more realistic shape regarding encounter acceptance. The simulator study was conducted in an A330 motion-based full-flight simulator with pilots-in-the-loop. The analysed scenario was a wake encounter during final approach. The encounter conditions corresponded to a heavy-behind-heavy situation for Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) operations. The aircraft was flown either manually (in normal law) or with autopilot engaged. Altogether 93 encounters have been simulated, 38 with straight and 55 encounters with curved vortices. For encounters under manual control the simulator study revealed a potential risk of pilot induced oscillations (PIO) during encounters with curved vortices. With autopilot engaged not even one encounter with curved vortices was classified to be unacceptable. Although significant aircraft response was experienced the autopilot never disengaged automatically in any encounter. Altogether about 12 percent of the encounters were not accepted by the pilots. This is indeed a significant number, especially as the analysed scenarios can be regarded to be realistic situations which can occur in reality even if the applicable separation distances are applied.


Author(s):  
Vojin Tošić ◽  
Bojana Mirković

In Europe more than one third of the 100 busiest airports have only one runway and most of them have no possibility to build another one. Aircraft of all types and sizes must use that same runway which affects operational complexity. In such situations the problem of capacity appears since separation between aircraft is based on all of them following the same path and smaller aircraft following larger ones have to wait for the wake vortex to dissipate, in the case of both arrivals and departures. This paper offers a possible concept for increasing single-runway airport landing capacity. It is based on separating smaller aircraft to a final approach path that is not affected by the wake vortices produced by the larger aircraft. Published references dealing with this topic are included and discussed. The operation rules proposed are based on existing standards and some best practices. This paper does not discuss available technological solutions.


Author(s):  
Van B. Nakagawara ◽  
Ronald W. Montgomery ◽  
Archie E. Dillard ◽  
Leon N. McLin ◽  
C. William Connor

AIAA Journal ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 292-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jongil Han ◽  
Yuh-Lang Lin ◽  
David G. Schowalter ◽  
S. P. Arya ◽  
Fred H. Proctor

2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 501-517 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Varnavas ◽  
L. Lassiani ◽  
V. Valenta ◽  
A. Ciogli ◽  
F. Gasparrini ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 2203
Author(s):  
Antal Hiba ◽  
Attila Gáti ◽  
Augustin Manecy

Precise navigation is often performed by sensor fusion of different sensors. Among these sensors, optical sensors use image features to obtain the position and attitude of the camera. Runway relative navigation during final approach is a special case where robust and continuous detection of the runway is required. This paper presents a robust threshold marker detection method for monocular cameras and introduces an on-board real-time implementation with flight test results. Results with narrow and wide field-of-view optics are compared. The image processing approach is also evaluated on image data captured by a different on-board system. The pure optical approach of this paper increases sensor redundancy because it does not require input from an inertial sensor as most of the robust runway detectors.


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