New automatic aircraft landing system passes its first
test
Ironing out the glitches with GPS negates the need for
ground support.
The modified research aircraft Diamond DA42 making
an automatic landing approach.
German researchers have demonstrated
an automatic landing system for aircraft that they say works without the need
for ground-based support systems.
If they're right, it could change life
in the air - or, more accurately, coming down from the
air.
TECHNOLOGY
Automatic landings are standard procedure at major
airports, which have an Instrument Landing System (ILS) to ensure safe
navigation. Smaller airports usually aren't so well equipped, however, which can
be a problem in adverse conditions.
"Automatic landing is essential,
especially in the context of the future role of aviation," says Martin Kügler,
the Chair of Flight System Dynamics at Technische Universität München
(TUM).
As part of a project called C2Land, researchers from TUM and
Technische Universität Braunschweig (TUB) developed an autopilot system that
effectively navigates using GPS.
To do that, they say, they first had to
overcome the problem that GPS signals are susceptible to measurement
inaccuracies; as such, a GPS receiver in an aircraft can't always reliably
detect atmospheric disturbances, for example.
That means, they add, that
until now pilots using GPS have had to take over control at an altitude of no
less than 60 metres and land the aircraft manually.
Infrared camera image showing selected
runway.
To address this, a TUB team designed an optical reference
system - a camera in the normal visible range and an infrared camera that can
also provide data under conditions with poor visibility - and developed
custom-tailored image processing software that lets the system determine where
the aircraft is relative to the runway based on the camera data it
receives.
The TUM team then developed the entire automatic control system
for its own research aircraft, a modified Diamond DA42, which is equipped with a
fly-by-wire system enabling control by means of an advanced autopilot.
To
make automatic landings possible, other functions were integrated into the
software, such as comparison of data from the cameras with GPS signals,
calculation of a virtual glide path for the landing approach as well as flight
control for various phases of the approach.
And it appears to work.
Writing in the journal ION, the researchers report that the aircraft
successfully made a completely automatic landing during a test flight back in
May.
"The cameras already recognise the runway at a great distance from
the airport," says pilot Thomas Wimmer. "The system then guides the aircraft
through the landing approach on a completely automatic basis and lands it
precisely on the runway's centreline."
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.