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Validating the Airspace Concept Evaluation System for Different Weather Days
20
Citations
1
References
2006
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringDifferent Weather DaysWeather ForecastingAir Transport SystemEarth ScienceSocial SciencesNumerical Weather PredictionAtmospheric ScienceAirport ThroughputSystems EngineeringMeteorological MeasurementModeling And SimulationNational Airspace SystemTransportation EngineeringAir Traffic ControlMeteorologyGeographyForecastingAir Traffic ManagementClimatologyHistorical DaysAtmospheric ConditionAerospace EngineeringUrban Climate
This paper extends the process for validating the Airspace Concept Evaluation System using real-world historical flight operational data. System inputs such as flight plans and airport en-route capacities, are generated and processed to create a realistic reproduction of a single day's operations within the National Airspace System. System outputs such as airport throughput, delays, and en-route sector loads are then compared to real world operational metrics and delay statistics for the reproduced day. The process is repeated for 4 historical days with high and low traffic volume and delay attributed to weather. These 4 days are simulated using default en-route capacities and variable en-route capacities used to emulate weather. The validation results show that default enroute capacity simulations are closer to real-world data for low weather days than high weather days. The use of reduced variable enroute capacities adds a large delay bias to ACES but delay trends between weather days are better represented.
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