6 results
Search Results
2. Historical analysis (2001–2019) of low‐level wind shear at the Hong Kong International Airport.
- Author
-
Hon, Kai‐Kwong and Chan, Pak‐wai
- Subjects
- *
WIND shear , *INTERNATIONAL airports , *DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) , *HISTORICAL analysis , *AIR traffic - Abstract
This paper analyses over 10,000 quality‐controlled pilot reports of low‐level wind shear ('wind shear') at the Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA; ICAO code: VHHH) between 2001 and 2019. HKIA is well known for its susceptibility to wind shear, which is a potential hazard for aircraft during landing and take‐off. Wind shear at HKIA exhibits strong seasonality with double peaks in the middle of the spring and summer months. There is a strong diurnal cycle in report numbers, peaking towards the afternoon, as modulated by air traffic at HKIA. On average, there are 115 days per year with wind shear reported, with possible power law distribution in the number of days with different number of reports. By comparing the background wind distribution during those minutes with pilot reports against the climatological distribution, wind shear is observed to be, on average, favoured under higher wind speeds (≥6 m s−1) and reduced under lower speeds with shifted frequency peak and heavier tail, although statistical behaviour can differ significantly across individual runway corridors. Preferred background wind directions for wind shear occurrence highlight the role of terrain influence upstream of HKIA. While positive shear (65.6%) is more often reported than negative shear (34.4%), both types of wind shear events appear to follow an exponential distribution in shear magnitude, with similar rates of decay. This is by far the largest statistical study of low‐level wind shear at an airport. Results can serve as an important local reference in addition to being a useful example for airports around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The network of US airports and its effects on employment.
- Author
-
Sheard, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYMENT statistics , *LABOR supply , *AIRPORT expansion , *EMPLOYMENT , *AIRPORTS - Abstract
This paper estimates the effects of airport infrastructure on employment and the distribution of the labor force in US metropolitan areas. The analysis is based on models for the air network and for its effects on employment, which are estimated using US data. Air traffic is found to have a positive effect on the population of the local area, with an elasticity of 0.010, so airport improvements induce a reallocation of workers between regions. Air traffic is also found to have a positive effect on employment in the local area with an elasticity of 0.036 and a weakly positive effect on the employment rate in other places within 400 miles. Simulations suggest that for each job created in the local area by an airport expansion, two and a half jobs are created elsewhere in the United States due to the changes in the air network and the distribution of employment. Expanding the average airport adds one job in the United States for roughly each $78,000 invested. The results further suggest that the US air network is less centralized than would be optimal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Alerting of hectometric turbulence features at Hong Kong International Airport using a short-range LIDAR.
- Author
-
Kai-Kwong Hon and Pak-Wai Chan
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL airports , *TURBULENCE , *LIDAR , *AIR flow , *WIND shear - Abstract
Small-scale, fast-evolving airflow disturbances, possibly due to upstream building clusters, are known to affect aircraft landing at corridor 25RA of Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA), China, under southerly or southwesterly winds. The paper presents a new algorithm, based on the concept of coherent integrated differential velocity (CIDV), for the automatic alerting of such hectometric (scale of hundreds of metres) turbulence features using short-range LIDAR (SRL) scans at 30 m radial resolution and an observation frequency of around every 20 s by Hong Kong Observatory (HKO). The CIDV identifies the cumulative effect of coherent patches of radial velocity changes occurring along the landing flight path by comparing two consecutive subminute SRL scans. Verification was conducted between June and September 2017 against a selection of relevant pilot reports, with a positive skill level observed over the whole range of the CIDV thresholds considered. When simulating a realistic setting where the SRL would issue alerts in conjunction with HKO's operational Windshear and Turbulence Warning System (WTWS), the CIDV algorithm would bring a gain in hit rate between 5% and 25%, with a corresponding increase in alert duration between 0.4% and 20%. The chosen CIDV threshold of 0.4 m·s-1 nautical mile (nm) can be physically interpreted as an average radial velocity change of 4.0 m·s-1 sustained over a distance of < 200 m (or between 2 and 3 s of flight), which agrees with reported values of crosswind changes considered significant for a landing aircraft and also pilots' perception of the characteristics of such events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Evaluating the quality of airport service using the fuzzy multi-criteria decision-making method: a case study of Taiwanese airports.
- Author
-
Chien-Chang, Chou
- Subjects
- *
CASE studies , *AIRPORTS , *MULTIPLE criteria decision making , *DECISION support systems , *INTERNATIONAL airports - Abstract
In today's highly competitive air transportation environment, the quality of airport service is an important issue. In this paper, we present a fuzzy multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) method for the evaluation of the quality of airport service. The data are collected from the passengers who depart from two international airports in Taiwan. The fuzzy MCDM model is defuzzied using the inverse function arithmetic representation method. The results show that the average quality of the Taoyuan International Airport service is better than that of the Kaohsiung International Airport service. This paper also analyses the quality of airport service using the fuzzy expert system to improve the performance of airport service. The analysis results show that the Kaohsiung International Airport and the Taoyuan International Airports' improvement efforts should be concentrated on seven and five specific service items, respectively. The findings of this paper are to help the decision-makers and the managers of airports improve the quality of airport service. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Interacting forms of expertise in security governance: the example of CCTV surveillance at Geneva International Airport.
- Author
-
Klauser, Francisco
- Subjects
- *
CLOSED-circuit television , *TELEVISION in security systems , *INTERNATIONAL airports , *POWER (Social sciences) , *EXPERTISE - Abstract
The paper investigates the multiple public-private exchanges and cooperation involved in the installation and development of CCTV surveillance at Geneva International Airport. Emphasis is placed on the interacting forms of authority and expertise of five parties: the user(s), owner and supplier of the camera system, as well as the technical managers of the airport and the Swiss regulatory bodies in airport security. While placing the issues of airport surveillance in the particular context of a specific range of projects and transformations relating to the developments of CCTV at Geneva Airport, the paper not only provides important insights into the micro-politics of surveillance at Geneva Airport, but aims to re-institute these as part of a broader ‘problematic’: the mediating role of expertise and the growing functional fragmentation of authority in contemporary security governance. On this basis, the paper also exemplifies the growing mutual interdependences between security and business interests in the ever growing ‘surveillant assemblage’ in contemporary security governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.