Fri, May 06, 2016
Four Aircraft Flew Four Different Public Service Support Scenarios Simultaneously
The Nevada Institute for Autonomous Systems (NIAS) recently launched four Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs or drones) simultaneous on four different public service support scenarios at the Reno-Stead UAV Test Range in close collaboration with the NASA-Ames UAV Command Center. The importance of this NASA Unmanned Traffic Management (UTM) test reflects the complexity of the air traffic flight demonstration — the other five FAA-designated UAS Test Sites across the National Airspace System (NAS) did the same thing at the same time, and all did it three times — all carefully planned and expertly executed. The Nevada-NASA team includes the Nevada Governor’s Office of Economic Development (GOED), NIAS, the University of Nevada-Reno, the Reno-Tahoe Airport Authority, GC2IT, and Flight Research Aerospace.
This NASA National Campaign flight tests are part of the NASA Unmanned Aerial Vehicle “National Campaign” – a first mass-stress test of NASA’s Unmanned Traffic Management (UTM) research platform that also included injected virtual missions near Nevada’s Reno-Stead Airport Test Site to add more realistic UAV traffic to monitor and de-conflict by NASA’s research operators. This was the first live UTM platform, traffic management, and situational awareness display demonstration to enable UAV traffic to file flight plans, gain approval, and fly safely in the FAA’s NAS while ensuring airspace separation between manned and unmanned aviation. The NASA UTM research program is supporting the FAA’s development of an air traffic management capability to fully integrate UAVs into the National Airspace and into their sophisticated NextGen ADS-B aircraft flight control system.
Dr. Richard Kelley is the chief engineer for the University of Nevada-Reno’s NAASIC, the research laboratory for autonomous robotic systems and intelligent machine research and industry collaboration, and the lead scientist on the Nevada portion of the Nevada NASA national project. He is working with NASA to develop low-altitude aircraft management software with the intent on making the airspace safer for aircraft. “It’s exciting to be at the forefront of technological development,” Kelley said. “We’ll be developing and testing several types of software that might integrate even small UAVs safely into the airspace. It’s just beginning, and we’ve already had some successes as NASA continues researching various concepts for potential air traffic management platforms. It’s great to be a part of history with 24 aircraft across the country testing the platforms all at once through the NASA project. Even more exciting is that Nevada safely
launched 32 Nevada UAS Test Site Certificate of Authorization (COA) flights in support to NASA’s UTM research today.”
"Completing this NASA National Campaign demonstrates great collaboration and teamwork between the State of Nevada, the Nevada Institute for Autonomous Systems, Nevada Teammates, NASA and the FAA,” reported Chris Walach, the NIAS Director of Operations for Unmanned Aviation and the FAA-designated UAS Test Site. “The complexity of conducting simultaneous flights significantly ups the ante and realism of integrating manned and unmanned aviation into the National Airspace. After taking part in a successfully coordinated and executed NASA National Campaign across America, our Nevada UTM Team has earned the reputation as ‘the best of the best’ supporting the NASA UAV research and development programs. This confidence in the Nevada-NASA team has resulted in NASA selecting the Nevada Reno-Stead Airport Test Range as the primary test site for future NASA UTM testing.”
(Source: News release. Image from file)
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