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NASA NTRS · Abstract

Emergency Landing Planning for Damaged Aircraft

Published 2019-08-12 From Ames Research Center 3 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Ames Research Center.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

Considerable progress has been made over the last 15 years on building adaptive control systems to assist pilots in flying damaged aircraft. Once a pilot has regained control of a damaged aircraft, the next problem is to determine the best site for an emergency landing. In general, the decision depends on many factors including the actual control envelope of the aircraft, distance to the site, weather en route, characteristics of the approach path, characteristics of the runway or landing site, and emergency facilities at the site. All of these influence the risk to the aircraft, to the passengers and crew, and to people and property on the ground. We describe an ongoing project to build and demonstrate an emergency landing planner that takes these various factors into consideration and proposes possible routes and landing sites to the pilot, ordering them according to estimated risk. We give an overview of the system architecture and input data, describe our preliminary modeling of risk, and describe how we search the space of landing sites and routes.

Authors

  • Meuleau, Nicolas Stinger Ghaffarin Technologies, Inc.
  • Plaunt, Christian John NASA Ames Research Center
  • Smith, David E. NASA Ames Research Center

Citation: Meuleau, Nicolas, Plaunt, Christian John, Smith, David E. (2019). Emergency Landing Planning for Damaged Aircraft. Ames Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20090033735. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20090033735 ↗