Planes Without Pilots
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. - Mounting evidence that the co-pilot crashed a
Germanwings plane into a French mountain has prompted a global debate about how
to better screen crewmembers for mental illness and how to ensure that no one is
left alone in the cockpit.
But among many aviation experts, the discussion has taken a different turn.
How many human pilots, some wonder, are really necessary aboard commercial
planes?
One? None?
Advances in sensor technology, computing and artificial intelligence are
making human pilots less necessary than ever in the cockpit. Already, government
agencies are experimenting with replacing the co-pilot, perhaps even both pilots
on cargo planes, with robots or remote operators.
"The industry is starting to come out and say we are willing to put our
R&D money into that," said Parimal Kopardekar, manager of the safe
autonomous system operations project at NASA's Ames Research
Center.
In 2014, airlines carried 838.4 million passengers on more than 8.5 million
flights. Commercial aviation is already heavily automated. Modern aircraft are
generally flown by a computer autopilot that tracks its position using motion
sensors and dead reckoning, corrected as necessary by GPS. Software systems are
also used to land commercial aircraft.
In a recent survey of airline pilots, those operating Boeing 777s reported
that they spent just seven minutes manually piloting their planes in a typical
flight. Pilots operating Airbus planes spent half that time.
And commercial planes are becoming smarter all the time. "An Airbus
airliner knows enough not to fly into a mountain," said David Mindell, a
Massachusetts Institute of Technology aeronautics and astronautics professor.
"It has a warning system that tells a pilot. But it doesn't take
over."
Such a system could take over, if permitted. Already, the Pentagon has
deployed automated piloting software in F-16 fighter jets. The Auto Collision
Ground Avoidance System reportedly saved a plane and pilot in November during a
combat mission against Islamic State forces.
The Pentagon has invested heavily in robot aircraft. As of 2013, there were
more than 11,000 drones in the military arsenal. But drones are almost always
remotely piloted, rather than autonomous. Indeed, more than 150 humans are
involved in the average combat mission flown by a drone.
This summer, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon
research organization, will take the next step in plane automation with the
Aircrew Labor In-Cockpit Automation System, or Alias. Sometime this year, the
agency will begin flight testing a robot that can be quickly installed in the
right seat of military aircraft to act as the co-pilot. The portable onboard
robot will be able to speak, listen, manipulate flight controls and read
instruments.The machine, a bit like R2D2, will have many of the skills of a
human pilot, including the ability to land the plane and to take off. It will
assist the human pilot on routine flights and be able to take over the flight in
emergency situations.
A number of aerospace companies and universities, in three competing teams,
are working with Darpa to develop the robot. The agency plans for the robot
co-pilot to be "visually aware" in the cockpit and to be able to control the
aircraft by manipulating equipment built for human hands, such as the pilot's
yoke and pedals, as well as the various knobs, toggles and
buttons.
Ideally, the robots will rely on voice recognition technologies and speech
synthesis to communicate with human pilots and flight controllers.
"This is really about how we can foster a new kind of automation structured
around augmenting the human," said Daniel Patt, a program manager in Darpa's
Tactical Technology Office.
NASA is exploring a related possibility: moving the co-pilot out of the
cockpit on commercial flights, and instead using a single remote operator to
serve as co-pilot for multiple aircraft.
In this scenario, a ground controller might operate as a dispatcher
managing a dozen or more flights simultaneously. It would be possible for the
ground controller to "beam" into individual planes when needed and to land a
plane remotely in the event that the pilot became incapacitated - or
worse.
What the Germanwings crash "has done has elevated the question of should
there or not be ways to externally control commercial aircraft," said Mary
Cummings, the director of the Humans and Autonomy Laboratory at Duke University
and a former Navy F-18 pilot, who is a researcher on the Darpa
project.
"Could we have a single-pilot aircraft with the ability to remotely control
the aircraft from the ground that is safer than today's systems? The answer is
yes."
NASA would like to see fewer humans guiding planes on the ground, too. This
month, in a research laboratory here, agency officials ran a simulation of new
software intended to bring more automation to the nation's air traffic control
system, specifically to help with congestion and spacing of
aircraft.
Last month at the NASA Ames facility, retired air traffic controllers and
commercial pilots sat at air traffic control terminals and helped scientists
test the system as it simulated air traffic arriving in Phoenix.
The software, known as Terminal Sequencing and Spacing, can coordinate the
speed and separation of hundreds of aircraft simultaneously to improve the flow
of planes landing at airports. Ultimately, NASA says, it may be able to increase
the density of air traffic in the nation's skies by as much as 20 percent - with
fewer human controllers.
Indeed, the potential savings from the move to more autonomous aircraft and
air traffic control systems is enormous. In 2007, a research report for NASA
estimated that the labor costs related to the co-pilot position alone in the
world's passenger aircraft amounted to billions of dollars
annually.
Automating that job may save money. But will passengers ever set foot on
plane piloted by robots, or humans thousands of miles from the
cockpit?
"You need humans where you have humans," said Dr. Cummings. "If you have a
bunch of humans on an aircraft, you're going to need a Captain Kirk on the
plane. I don't ever see commercial transportation going over to
drones."
In written testimony submitted to the Senate last month, the Air Line
Pilots Association warned, "It is vitally important that the pressure to
capitalize on the technology not lead to an incomplete safety analysis of the
aircraft and operations."
The association defended the unique skills of a human pilot: "A pilot on
board an aircraft can see, feel, smell or hear many indications of an impending
problem and begin to formulate a course of action before even sophisticated
sensors and indicators provide positive indications of trouble."
Even at NASA's recent symposium, experts worried over the deployment of
increasingly autonomous systems. Not all of the scientists and engineers who
attended believe that increasingly sophisticated planes will always be safer
planes.
"Technology can have costs of its own," said Amy Pritchett, an associate
professor of aerospace engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. "If
you put more technology in the cockpit, you have more technology that can fail."
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