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Design for Survivability: An Approach to Assured Autonomy

Authors :
Natalia Alexandrov
Thomas A. Ozoroski
Source :
16th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference.
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2016.

Abstract

Rapidly expanding unmanned air traffic includes and will continue to include non-cooperative participants. Non-cooperative behavior may be due to technical failure, a lack of appropriate equipment, a careless or malicious operator. Regardless of the cause, the outcome remains: growing density of non-cooperative traffic will increase the risk of collision between unmanned vehicles and aircraft carrying humans. As a result, the degraded safety of airspace may limit access to airspace, with adverse consequences for the traveling public and the economy. Because encounters with small non-cooperative objects, such as birds or wayward drones, can happen too rapidly for an external control system to mitigate them, it is imperative that the aircraft that carry humans survive encounters with non-cooperative vehicles. To-date, design for survivability has been practiced explicitly in the military domain. Survivability against collisions in civil aviation has been limited to tolerances against bird strikes; and these tolerances have proved inadequate on occasion. The growing risk of collision with unmanned vehicles now requires the development of survivability discipline for civilian transport aircraft. The new discipline must be infused into multidisciplinary design methods, on par with traditional disciplines. In this paper, we report on a preliminary study of survivability considerations for the civil aviation domain.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
16th AIAA Aviation Technology, Integration, and Operations Conference
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........adde96c2bb4f7885e313de97007ce4b9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2514/6.2016-4374