Brief summaries are given of research activities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) under the sponsorship of the FAA/NASA Joint University Program. Topics covered include hazard assessment and cockpit presentation issues for microburst alerting systems; the situational awareness effect of automated air traffic control (ATC) datalink clearance amendments; a graphical simulation system for adaptive, automated approach spacing; an expert system for temporal planning with application to runway configuration management; deterministic multi-zone ice accretion modeling; alert generation and cockpit presentation for an integrated microburst alerting system; and passive infrared ice detection for helicopter applications
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University, a program emphasizing graduate an...
An element of the NASA/FAA windshear program is the integration of ground-based microburst informati...
The goals of this program are consistent with the interests of both NASA and the FAA in furthering t...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1993....
Alert generation and cockpit presentation issues for low level wind shear (microburst) alerts are in...
An investigation of air transportation technology at MIT during 1992 - 1993 is presented. One comple...
There are two completed projects and five new or continuing research activities under the sponsorshi...
Information transfer and display issues associated with the dissemination of hazardous weather warni...
An element of the NASA/FAA wind shear program is the integration of ground-based microburst informat...
There are four areas of research being pursued in 1988 under sponsorship of the FAA/NASA Joint Unive...
The following subject areas are covered: microburst detection, location and measurement; thermal ale...
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton proceeded along four avenues: Guidance and co...
The Air Transportation Research Program at Princeton University proceeded along five avenues during ...
The topics addressed are: (1) experimental evaluation of candidate graphical microburst displays; (2...
Low-altitude windshear is the leading weather-related cause of fatal aviation accidents in the U.S. ...
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University, a program emphasizing graduate an...
An element of the NASA/FAA windshear program is the integration of ground-based microburst informati...
The goals of this program are consistent with the interests of both NASA and the FAA in furthering t...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1993....
Alert generation and cockpit presentation issues for low level wind shear (microburst) alerts are in...
An investigation of air transportation technology at MIT during 1992 - 1993 is presented. One comple...
There are two completed projects and five new or continuing research activities under the sponsorshi...
Information transfer and display issues associated with the dissemination of hazardous weather warni...
An element of the NASA/FAA wind shear program is the integration of ground-based microburst informat...
There are four areas of research being pursued in 1988 under sponsorship of the FAA/NASA Joint Unive...
The following subject areas are covered: microburst detection, location and measurement; thermal ale...
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton proceeded along four avenues: Guidance and co...
The Air Transportation Research Program at Princeton University proceeded along five avenues during ...
The topics addressed are: (1) experimental evaluation of candidate graphical microburst displays; (2...
Low-altitude windshear is the leading weather-related cause of fatal aviation accidents in the U.S. ...
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University, a program emphasizing graduate an...
An element of the NASA/FAA windshear program is the integration of ground-based microburst informati...
The goals of this program are consistent with the interests of both NASA and the FAA in furthering t...