A lane-based approach to large-scale unmanned aircraft systems traffic management

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Publication Type dissertation
School or College School of Computing
Department Computing
Author Sacharny, David
Title A lane-based approach to large-scale unmanned aircraft systems traffic management
Date 2022
Description Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) promise to be a disruptive technology, providing businesses and the general public with advanced robotic tools at low costs. However, the anticipated scale and density of operations make complete human control impractical, and it is necessary to develop the cyber-physical science, technology and engineering methods to design, develop and safely control these tightly coupled cyber-physical systems. The research presented here is motivated by a specific problem in UAS Traffic Management (UTM) known as Strategic Deconfliction, a conflict management strategy that is achieved through airspace organization and management, demand and capacity balancing, and traffic synchronization. This research introduces a lane-based approach to strategic conflict management. Methods for constructing aerial corridors and scheduling flights within them are given, and issues that arise in UTM are explored under this framework. It is shown that the computational complexity of strategic deconfliction under the lane-based approach is reduced for individual operators, and additionally enables operators to assess the state of the airspace more effectively for contingency handling. To assess the performance characteristics of lane-based systems, and to compare this strategy to what is currently proposed by the FAA and NASA, a set of measures including flow, density, and other network properties that have been traditionally used for ground-based traffic are applied to UTM. The trajectory of this research was informed by an effort to commercialize it, and it is currently being funded by two grants from the Utah Department of Transportation, as well as a Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program in collaboration with the United States Air Force. Additionally, the author of this dissertation participated in NASA's Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) National Campaign Developmental Test (NC-DT) X3 simulations. The X3 simulations were the first time that multiple industry partners were gathered by NASA to test and collaborate on software implementations for AAM, with particular emphasis on strategic conflict management.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management (c) David Sacharny
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s6a3953w
Setname ir_etd
ID 2100227
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6a3953w
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