Publication | Closed Access
Build 4 of the Airspace Concept Evaluation System
83
Citations
9
References
2006
Year
EngineeringIntelligent SystemsBuild 4Systems EngineeringModeling And SimulationAir Traffic ControlAircraft NavigationComputer EngineeringAces ScenariosAvionics SystemComputer ScienceAir Traffic ManagementFormal Concept AnalysisAerospace EngineeringAutomated ReasoningAces Build 4Air Vehicle SystemGate DepartureData Modeling
The Airspace Concept Evaluation System (ACES) is a non-real-time, computer simulation of local, regional and national aircraft operations from gate departure to gate arrival. The overarching objective is to provide a flexible National Airspace System (NAS) simulation and modeling environment that can assess the impact of new NAS tools, concepts, and architectures, including those that represent a significant departure from the existing NAS operational paradigm. Two of the major development goals of ACES are the ability to configure simulations that target specific analysis needs and the ability to model the interactions of the numerous command and control entities that are part of current NAS operations and in future operational concepts. ACES development has been ongoing for several years, with the first version of ACES, Build 1, being delivered in March 2003. The most recent version of ACES, Build 4, was released in December 2005. This paper serves as overview to the features and capabilities of ACES Build 4 and the ways it differs from previous versions. A number of tools for preparing ACES scenarios and analyzing ACES outputs are also described to give potential users an understanding of how ACES can be used.
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