This image shows an aviation version of a smartphone navigation app that makes suggestions for an aircraft to fly an alternate, more efficient route. The new trajectories are based on information available from NASA’s Digital Information Platform and processed by the Collaborative Departure Digital Rerouting tool. NASA
Just like your smartphone navigation app
can instantly analyze information from many sources to suggest the best route
to follow, a NASA-developed resource is now making data available to help the
aviation industry do the same thing.
To assist air traffic managers in
keeping airplanes moving efficiently through the skies, information about
weather, potential delays, and more is being gathered and processed to support
decision making tools for a variety of aviation applications.
Appropriately named the Digital
Information Platform (DIP), this living database hosts key data gathered by
flight participants such as airlines or drone operators. It will help power
additional tools that, among other benefits, can save you travel time.
“Ultimately, the aviation industry… and even the flying public, will
benefit from what we develop.
SWATI SAXENA
NASA Aerospace Engineer
“Through DIP we’re also demonstrating how to deliver digital services for
aviation users via a modern cloud-based, service-oriented architecture,” said
Swati Saxena, DIP project manager at NASA’s Ames
Research Center in California.
The intent is not to compete with
others. Instead, the hope is that industry will see DIP as a reference they can
use in developing and implementing their own platforms and digital services.
“Ultimately, the aviation industry
– the Federal Aviation Administration, commercial airlines, flight operators,
and even the flying public – will benefit from what we develop,” Saxena said.
The platform and digital services
have even more benefits than just saving some time on a journey.
For example, NASA recently
collaborated with airlines to demonstrate a traffic management tool that improved traffic flow at select airports,
saving thousands of pounds of jet fuel and significantly reducing carbon
emissions.
Now, much of the data gathered in
collaboration with airlines and integrated on the platform is publicly
available. Users who qualify can create a guest account and access DIP data
at a new website created by the project.
It’s all part of NASA’s vision for
21st century aviation involving revolutionary
next-generation future airspace and safety tools.
Managing
Future Air Traffic
During the 2030s and beyond, the
skies above the United States are expected to become much busier.
Facing this rising demand, the
current National Airspace System – the network of U.S. aviation infrastructure
including airports, air navigation facilities, and communications – will be
challenged to keep up. DIP represents a key piece of solving that challenge.
NASA’s vision for future airspace
and safety involves new technology to create a highly automated, safe, and
scalable environment.
What this vision looks like is a
flight environment where many types of vehicles and their pilots, as well as
air traffic managers, use state-of-the-art automated tools and systems that
provide highly detailed and curated information.
These tools leverage new
capabilities like machine learning and artificial intelligence to streamline
efficiency and handle the increase in traffic expected in the coming decades.
Digital
Services Ecosystem in Action
To begin implementing this new
vision, our aeronautical innovators are evaluating their platform, DIP, and
services at several airports in Texas. This initial stage is a building block
for larger such demonstrations in the future.
“These digital services are being
used in the live operational environment by our airline partners to improve
efficiency of the current airspace operations,” Saxena said. “The tools are
currently in use in the Dallas/Fort Worth area and will be deployed in the
Houston airspace in 2025.”
The results from these digital
tools are already making a difference.
Proven Air
Traffic Results
During 2022, a NASA machine
learning-based tool named Collaborative Digital Departure Rerouting, designed to improve the flow of air traffic and
prevent flight delays, saved more than 24,000 lbs. (10,886 kg.) of fuel by
streamlining air traffic in the Dallas area.
If such tools were used across the
entire country, the improvements made in efficiency, safety, and sustainability
would make a notable difference to the flying public and industry.
“Continued agreements with airlines
and the aviation industry led to the creation and expansion of this partnership
ecosystem,” Saxena said. “There have been benefits across the board.”
DIP was developed under NASA’s
Airspace Operations and Safety Program.
Learn about NASA’s Collaborative Digital Departure Rerouting tool and
how it uses information from the Digital Information Platform to provide
airlines with routing options similar to how drivers navigate using cellphone
apps.
About the Author
John Gould, Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate
John Gould is a member of NASA Aeronautics' Strategic Communications team at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC. He is dedicated to public service and NASA’s leading role in scientific exploration. Prior to working for NASA Aeronautics, he was a spaceflight historian and writer, having a lifelong passion for space and aviation.
Source: NASA Cloud-Based Platform Could Help Streamline, Improve Air Traffic - NASA
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