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  • Air Transportation and Safety  (5)
  • Magnetism  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-27
    Description: Author(s): Da-Yong Liu, Ya-Min Quan, Dong-Meng Chen, Liang-Jian Zou, and Hai-Qing Lin In this paper we explore the magnetic and orbital properties in iron pnictides based on the two-orbital as well as the five-orbital Hubbard models. These properties are closely related to a tetragonal-orthorhombic structural phase transition. The electron-lattice coupling, interplaying with electron... [Phys. Rev. B 84, 064435] Published Fri Aug 26, 2011
    Keywords: Magnetism
    Print ISSN: 1098-0121
    Electronic ISSN: 1095-3795
    Topics: Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-05-16
    Description: Author(s): Yu-Jun Zhang, Jia-Hui Chen, Liang-Liang Li, Jing Ma, Ce-Wen Nan, and Yuan-Hua Lin Electric field manipulation of magnetic properties has attracted a lot of research interest recently in solid-state physics. However, ferroelectric strain modulation of antiferromagnetic (AFM) layer is rarely studied in ferromagnet/antiferromagnet/ferroelectric heterostructures. In this paper, we pr… [Phys. Rev. B 95, 174420] Published Mon May 15, 2017
    Keywords: Magnetism
    Print ISSN: 1098-0121
    Electronic ISSN: 1095-3795
    Topics: Physics
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-09-10
    Description: This presentation presents the capabilities of the Airspace Technology Demonstration 2 (ATD-2) Integrated Arrival, Departure, and Surface (IADS) system as a surface decision support tool for users, including Air Traffic Control (ATC) personnel working at the tower and Center facilities and airline Ramp personnel. The ATD-2 IADS capabilities include data exchange and integration, modeling and scheduling, surface metering, and departure scheduling for overhead stream insertion of constrained flights.
    Keywords: Air Transportation and Safety
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN72606 , ATD-2 Industry Workshop; Sep 04, 2019; Dallas, TX; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: This paper describes the design, development and results from a high fidelity human-in-the-loop simulation of an integrated set of trajectory-based automation tools providing precision scheduling, sequencing and controller merging and spacing functions. These integrated functions are combined into a system called the Terminal Area Precision Scheduling and Spacing (TAPSS) system. It is a strategic and tactical planning tool that provides Traffic Management Coordinators, En Route and Terminal Radar Approach Control air traffic controllers the ability to efficiently optimize the arrival capacity of a demand-impacted airport while simultaneously enabling fuel-efficient descent procedures. The TAPSS system consists of four-dimensional trajectory prediction, arrival runway balancing, aircraft separation constraint-based scheduling, traffic flow visualization and trajectory-based advisories to assist controllers in efficient metering, sequencing and spacing. The TAPSS system was evaluated and compared to today's ATC operation through extensive series of human-in-the-loop simulations for arrival flows into the Los Angeles International Airport. The test conditions included the variation of aircraft demand from a baseline of today's capacity constrained periods through 5%, 10% and 20% increases. Performance data were collected for engineering and human factor analysis and compared with similar operations both with and without the TAPSS system. The engineering data indicate operations with the TAPSS show up to a 10% increase in airport throughput during capacity constrained periods while maintaining fuel-efficient aircraft descent profiles from cruise to landing.
    Keywords: Air Transportation and Safety
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN2863 , USA/Europe Air Traffic Management Research and Development Seminar (ATM2011); Jun 14, 2011 - Jun 17, 2011; Berlin; Germany
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: The growth of global demand for air transportation has put increasing strain on the nation's air traffic management system. To relieve this strain, the International Civil Aviation Organization has urged all nations to adopt Performance-Based Navigation (PBN), which can help to reduce air traffic congestion, decrease aviation fuel consumption, and protect the environment. NASA has developed a Terminal Area Precision Scheduling and Spacing (TAPSS) system that can support increased use of PBN during periods of high traffic, while supporting fuel-efficient, continuous descent approaches. In the original development of this system, arrival aircraft are assigned fuel-efficient Area Navigation (RNAV) Standard Terminal Arrival Routes before their initial descent from cruise, with routing defined to a specific runway. The system also determines precise schedules for these aircraft that facilitate continuous descent through the assigned routes. To meet these schedules, controllers are given a set of advisory tools to precisely control aircraft. The TAPSS system has been evaluated in a series of human-in-the-loop (HITL) air traffic simulations during 2010 and 2011. Results indicated increased airport arrival throughput up to 10 over current operations, and maintained fuel-efficient aircraft decent profiles from the initial descent to landing with reduced controller workload. This paper focuses on results from a joint NASA and FAA HITL simulation conducted in 2012. Due to the FAA rollout of the advance terminal area PBN procedures at mid-sized airports first, the TAPSS system was modified to manage arrival aircraft as they entered Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON). Dallas-Love Field airport (DAL) was selected by the FAA as a representative mid-sized airport within a constrained TRACON airspace due to the close proximity of a major airport, in this case Dallas-Ft Worth International Airport, one of the busiest in the world. To address this constraint, RNAV routes and Required Navigation Performance with the particular capability known as Radius-to-Fix (RNP-RF) approaches to a short final were used. The purpose of this simulation was to get feedback on how current operations could benefit with the TAPSS system and also to evaluate the efficacy of the advisory tools to support the broader use of PBN in the US National Airspace System. For this NASA-FAA joint experiment, an Air Traffic Control laboratory at NASA Ames was arranged to simulate arrivals into DAL in Instrument Meteorological Conditions utilizing parallel dependent approaches, with two feeder positions that handed off traffic to one final position. Four FAA controllers participated, alternately covering these three positions. All participants were Full-Performance Level terminal controllers and members of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association. During the simulation, PBN arrival operations were compared and contrasted in three conditions. They were the Baseline, where none of the TAPSS systems TRACON controller decision support advisories were provided, the Limited Advisories, reflecting the existing but dormant capabilities of the current terminal automation equipment with providing a subset of the TAPSS systems advisories; numerical delay, landing sequence, and runway assignment information, and the Full Advisories, with providing the following in addition to the ones in the Limited condition; trajectory slot markers, timelines of estimated times of arrivals and sched
    Keywords: Air Transportation and Safety
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN8524 , Digital Avionics Systems Conference (DASC); Oct 06, 2013 - Oct 10, 2013; Syarcuse, NY; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: NASA is conducting the Airspace Technology Demonstration-2 to evaluate an Integrated Arrival, Departure, and Surface (IADS) traffic management system that extends traffic sequencing for the entire life-cycle of a flight from departure gate to arrival gate within multi-airport, metroplex environments. After development and testing in human-in-the-loop simulations, the IADS system was deployed to Charlotte Douglas International Airport for a three-year field evaluation. From the initial IADS concept development through the end of the Phase 1 field evaluation many lessons were learned with regards to the IADS scheduler. In this paper we describe how data from the Phase 1 field evaluation helped identify scheduler improvements and guided the implementation of refinements. The improvements in the IADS scheduler described in this paper are incorporated into the IADS Phase 2 scheduler enabling strategic Surface Metering Programs and will be evaluated during the field evaluation.
    Keywords: Air Transportation and Safety
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN68004 , USA/Europe Air Traffic Management Research and Development Seminar (ATM R&D 2019); Jun 17, 2019 - Jun 21, 2019; Vienna; Austria
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-09-10
    Description: This presentation provides description of the field evaluation of surface metering deployed by NASA in Charlotte International Airport (CLT) that began with a more tactical decision timeline and progressively expanded toward more strategic timelines. This will include an update on the latest status of the ongoing research and lessons learned.
    Keywords: Air Transportation and Safety
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN72607 , NASA Airspace Technology Demonstration 2 (ATD-2) Industry Workshop; Sep 04, 2019 - Sep 05, 2019; Dallas, TX; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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