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NASA NTRS · Conference Paper
Cyber Safety and Security for Reduced Crew Operations (RCO)
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 Glenn Research Center.
Abstract
Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.
NASA and the Aviation Industry is looking into reduced crew operations (RCO) that would cut today's required two-person flight crews down to a single pilot with support from ground-based crews. Shared responsibility across air and ground personnel will require highly reliable and secure data communication and supporting automation, which will be safety-critical for passenger and cargo aircraft. This paper looks at the different types and degrees of authority delegation given from the air to the ground and the ramifications of each, including the safety and security hazards introduced, the mitigation mechanisms for these hazards, and other demands on an RCO system architecture which would be highly invasive into (almost) all safety-critical avionics. The adjacent fields of unmanned aerial systems and autonomous ground vehicles are viewed to find problems that RCO may face and related aviation accident scenarios are described. The paper explores possible data communication architectures to meet stringent performance and information security (INFOSEC) requirements of RCO. Subsequently, potential challenges for RCO data communication authentication, encryption and non-repudiation are identified.
Authors
- Driscoll, Kevin R. Honeywell International, Inc.
- Roy, Aloke Honeywell International, Inc.
- Ponchak, Denise S. NASA Glenn Research Center
- Downey, Alan N. NASA Glenn Research Center
Keywords
- Communications
- Surveillance
- Navigation
Citation: Driscoll, Kevin R., Roy, Aloke, Ponchak, Denise S. , et al. (2019). Cyber Safety and Security for Reduced Crew Operations (RCO). Glenn Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20170004745. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20170004745 ↗