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Safer air traffic with EGNOS (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old May 16th 07, 05:11 PM posted to sci.space.news
Andrew Yee[_1_]
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Default Safer air traffic with EGNOS (Forwarded)

ESA News
http://www.esa.int

20 April 2007

Safer air traffic with EGNOS

Vertical guidance by means of signals from the sky: this is what EGNOS, the
first European satellite navigation service, will offer pilots during
approach and landing.

Flight trials are regularly conducted to demonstrate the new possibilities
offered by the European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service (EGNOS),
which has been launched by ESA, the European Commission and Eurocontrol.

A few weeks ago, the Direction Gale de l'Aviation Civile (DGAC French Civil
Aviation Authority) test plane was specially equipped to make tests using
EGNOS. At Limoges airport the ATR42 made a number of approaches and landings
using the new procedures, in each case aligning itself with the runway's
axis and then following a descent path to touchdown.

Inside the plane, normally used for calibration of airport systems in
France, the method of analysing the quality of the EGNOS signals was by
comparing the landing phases guided by satellite with landings using
traditional means such as the Instrument Landing System (ILS).

The results of Limoges trials show again that EGNOS signals allow approaches
and landings that meet the safety standards that govern international air
traffic.

One of the main advantages of EGNOS in this application is that it is
available everywhere without the need for ground infrastructure and it
provides vertical guidance procedures for every runway. Furthermore, the
cockpit data display is the same as for ILS, so there are no familiarisation
problems for the pilots and no additional training costs.

Currently in pre-operational service, EGNOS will be certified in 2008 for
safety-of-life applications such as air traffic control.

This system for improving GPS performance will provide a precision of better
than two metres, compared to 15 to 20 metres for GPS alone. In addition,
there is a guarantee as to the quality of the signals: if a problem is
detected, an alarm will be sent to the pilot.

Systems that are equivalent to EGNOS have been set up in the United States,
Japan and India, and these systems are compatible and interoperable. An
aircraft with a suitable receiver could operate in any area of these areas
-- it would always have satellite navigation support available, without
changing equipment.

For Europe, EGNOS is also the first step in satellite navigation, paving the
way for Galileo, which will be the first civil global system.

For European Civil Aviation Authorities, the long term plan is to combine
all the existing navigation systems to ensure greater assistance for pilots
and the best possible safety of air traffic in Europe and worldwide.

[NOTE: Images and weblinks supporting this release are available at
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMTHVLJC0F_index_1.html ]
 




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