Collision Risk and Operational Impact of Speed Change Advisories as Aircraft Collision Avoidance Maneuvers
Sydney M. Katz, Luis E. Alvarez, Michael Owen, Samuel Wu, Marc, Brittain, Anshuman Das, Mykel J. Kochenderfer

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the impact of speed change advisories in aircraft collision avoidance systems, finding they reduce collision risk but are less safe and efficient than traditional horizontal and vertical maneuvers.
Contribution
It introduces an MDP-based logic for speed advisories in ACAS Xr and compares its performance to existing collision avoidance maneuvers.
Findings
Speed advisories reduce collision risk.
Speed advisories are less safe than horizontal and vertical maneuvers.
Speed advisories are less efficient operationally.
Abstract
Aircraft collision avoidance systems have long been a key factor in keeping our airspace safe. Over the past decade, the FAA has supported the development of a new family of collision avoidance systems called the Airborne Collision Avoidance System X (ACAS X), which model the collision avoidance problem as a Markov decision process (MDP). Variants of ACAS X have been created for both manned (ACAS Xa) and unmanned aircraft (ACAS Xu and ACAS sXu). The variants primarily differ in the types of collision avoidance maneuvers they issue. For example, ACAS Xa issues vertical collision avoidance advisories, while ACAS Xu and ACAS sXu allow for horizontal advisories due to reduced aircraft performance capabilities. Currently, a new variant of ACAS X, called ACAS Xr, is being developed to provide collision avoidance capability to rotorcraft and Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) vehicles. Due to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAir Traffic Management and Optimization · Traffic and Road Safety · Risk and Safety Analysis
