Tag: Robert Pearce

Experts: Airspace Not Ready for Urban Air Mobility

Panelists: Moderator Donald W. Richardson, chief operating officer, Donrich Research Inc.; Gregory Bowles, vice president for global innovation and policy, General Aviation Manufacturers Association; Ravi Chaudhary, director for advanced programs and innovation, FAA Office of Commercial Space Transportation; Parimal H. Kopardekar, senior technologist, Air Transportation Systems, NASA’s Ames Research Center; Robert Pearce, acting director, Airspace Operations and Safety Program, NASA’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate; Joseph A. Post, deputy director, FAA Systems Engineering and Integration Office; Richard Terry, director of line operations, Delta Air Lines; James Ullmann, director of safety and technology, National Air Traffic Controllers Association

by Ben IannottaAerospace America editor-in-chief

The U.S. does not yet have a collaborative, integrated air traffic management system that can cope with the coming revolution in propeller craft that will whisk passengers over urban areas, said members of the “Air Traffic Management Modernization” panel June 27 at the 2018 AVIATION Forum in Atlanta.

“The user demands are getting more complex as [unmanned aircraft systems] and now air taxis and urban mobility concepts” want to enter the airspace, said Robert Pearce, acting director of NASA’s Airspace Operations and Safety Program. The FAA’s NextGen air traffic modernization initiative will address that demand, he explained, adding that “our job is to help by laying out that technology baseline.”

“As we go into these new paradigms, we need to bring in a much broader community,” Pearce said, referring to industry participation.

Richard Terry, director of line operations for Delta Airlines, cited “silos” of government responsibilities as a problem.

“We have to cut across them if we’re going to come up with an integrated plan,” he said.

One panelist said the integration problem has affected air traffic controllers, who need decision support tools to cope with expanding air traffic. Those tools “just don’t really exist,” said James Ullmann, director of safety and technology at the National Air Traffic Controllers Association, which represents the interests of controllers. He said the “stovepipes” of responsibility are one factor.

Ullmann cautioned that it’s also the basic infrastructure that must be considered. He made his case by showing photos of old computers and paper flight strips in a control tower.

“Something has to change. We have a lot of concerns,” he said.

Breaking those silos and stovepipes through collaboration will be critical to coping with the growing number and kinds of aircraft expected to maneuver through the National Airspace System, the panelists suggested.

Unmanned aerial systems and urban mobility aircraft are hot topics, but panelists also referred to supersonic jets, hypersonic test aircraft, balloons and spacecraft on their way to and from space.

The need to accelerate innovation and modernization of procedures came up several times in the discussion.

Ravi Chaudhary, director of advanced programs and innovation in the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation, said last fiscal year the FAA licensed 22 launch and reentry activities. Now, in the third fiscal quarter of 2018, FAA has already surpassed that number.

“We don’t expect that to show any signs of slowing down,” Chaudhary said.

Chaudhary said “regulatory humility” will be required to streamline licensing requirements as the pace of launches and recoveries increases. After the session, he added that “government does not always know best” and that innovations must be made at a faster pace.

Gregory Bowles, vice president for global innovation and policy at the General Aviation Manufacturers Association, expressed frustration about the pace of change in his industry.

“I operate in the [National Airspace System] day in and day out,” he said. “I understand how slowly we implement change.”

Bowles said unmanned aircraft are “knocking on the door, and we haven’t responded quickly enough.” He added that urban air mobility concerns are following close behind.

One panelist gave a specific example of the diversity of aircraft expected to ply the airspace and the complexities that this diversity raises.

Parimal “PK” Kopardeker, a senior technologist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California, referred to industry plans to fly balloons at about 60,000 feet.

“Clearly what’s interesting there is supersonic [aircraft] operating on fixed trajectory, and the balloons will be lingering around,” he said. “We have models of that” to “keep everything apart and safe” by data sharing.

Joseph Post, deputy director of FAA’s National Airspace Systems Engineering and Integration Office, said safety is not just driven by traffic management. He referred to an accident in New York City involving an aircraft attempting to land on top of a building: “That’s not an air traffic control problem,” he said.

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NASA’s New Aviation Era

Panelists: Moderator Rich Wahls, strategic technical adviser, Advanced Air Vehicles Program, NASA’s Langley Research Center; Robert Pearce, deputy associate administrator for strategy and acting director for Airspace Operations and Safety Program, NASA Headquarters; Peter Coen, project manager, Commercial Supersonic Technology Project, NASA; Jay Dryer, director, Advanced Air Vehicles Program; Davis Hackenberg, strategy adviser for urban air mobility, NASA’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate; Parimal Kopardekar, senior technologist for air transportation systems, NASA’s Ames Research Center; Craig Nickol, manager, Low Boom Flight Demonstrator Project, Integrated Aviation Systems Program, NASA

by Tom Risen, Aerospace America Staff Reporter (2017-2018)

During the “NASA Aeronautics at the Dawn of a New Era of Aviation” panel discussion June 28 at the 2018 AIAA AVIATION Forum in Atlanta, NASA officials explained how the agency is creating technologies to help companies design new types of aircraft that meet the shifting demands of the public while observing safety and acceptable noise standards.

Robert Pearce, acting director for NASA’s Airspace Operations and Safety Program, said Congress and the general public are excited about the agency’s aeronautics projects but that planning for experimental planes is difficult because funding is often granted one year at a time.

“We need to make sure we have a five-year budget” to develop X-planes, Pearce said.

NASA has contracted Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works to build a piloted X-plane that will test technologies for reducing the noise of a sonic boom enough to permit supersonic flights across the U.S. On June 26, the U.S. Air Force designated the plane the X-59 QueSST, naming it for the Quiet Supersonic Technology plane design Lockheed Martin created for NASA in 2016.

Peter Coen, project manager for NASA’s Commercial Supersonic Technology Project said the ban put in place against supersonic flight over land in the U.S. has been warranted but that the international challenge is now “how do we define acceptability” for noise created by planes that make a sonic thump instead of “unacceptable” sonic boom.

Jay Dryer, director of NASA’s Advanced Air Vehicles Program said the agency is being selective in research it can do to enable certification, safety and public acceptance for new types of aircraft but added it will also help prove out adjustments to subsonic airplanes.

Dyer said NASA recognizes the need for research “isn’t binary” between traditional markets or the new markets: “It’s really both,” he said.

NASA has completed market studies recently about the interest in electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft that companies are designing and testing with the aim of ferrying people from a city to the suburb, said Davis Hackenberg, strategy adviser for urban air mobility at NASA’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate.

“I would bet it’s hundreds of billions of dollars going into this industry over the next few years right now,” Hackenberg said of funding eVTOLs for urban air mobility. “There is a real opportunity to make this happen.”

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AIAA Announces Class of 2025 Honorary Fellows and Fellows

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 9, 2024 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) proudly congratulates its newly elected Class of 2025 Honorary Fellows and Fellows. The class will be inducted during a ceremony on Tuesday, 29 April, in Washington, DC, and celebrated during the AIAA Awards Gala on Wednesday, 30 April, AIAA Awards Gala tickets will be available in early 2025.

“Congratulations to each member of the Class of 2025 AIAA Honorary Fellows and Fellows for their remarkable accomplishments. They are among the most respected names in the aerospace profession,” said Dan Hastings, AIAA President. “These distinguished individuals have earned the respect and admiration of the global science and engineering community. We are in awe of their creativity and exceptional contributions that have advanced aerospace.”

Honorary Fellow is AIAA’s highest distinction, recognizing preeminent individuals who have made significant contributions to the aerospace industry and who embody the highest possible standards in aeronautics and astronautics. In 1933, Orville Wright became the first AIAA Honorary Fellow. Today, 245 people have been named AIAA Honorary Fellow.

AIAA confers Fellow upon individuals in recognition of their notable and valuable contributions to the arts, sciences or technology of aeronautics and astronautics. Nominees are AIAA Associate Fellows. Since the inception of this honor 2,092 persons have been elected as an AIAA Fellow.

“The Class of 2025 Honorary Fellows and Fellows are impressive aerospace professionals. They are dreamers who have transformed our understanding of flight and exploration, pushing the boundaries of human potential. I am privileged to call them friends and colleagues. Their groundbreaking work reminds me that innovation is born from passion, persistence, and the audacious belief that we can always reach a little further than we thought possible,” added AIAA CEO Clay Mowry.

2025 AIAA Honorary Fellows

Maj. Gen. Charles F. Bolden Jr., USMC (Ret.), The Charles F. Bolden Group LLC
Alec Gallimore, Duke University
The Honorable Steven J. Isakowitz, The Aerospace Corporation

2025 AIAA Fellows

Maj. Gen. James B. Armor Jr., USAF (Ret.), The Armor Group LLC
Hamsa Balakrishnan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Brett A. Bednarcyk, NASA Glenn Research Center
John Maurice Carson III, NASA
Paul J. Cefola, University at Buffalo
Todd K. Citron, The Boeing Company
Stephen B. Clay, Air Force Research Laboratory
William A. Crossley, Purdue University
Boris Diskin, NASA Langley Research Center
Mary Lynne Dittmar, Axiom Space (retired) / Dittmar Associates
Stephen N. Frick, Lockheed Martin Space
Demoz Gebre-Egziabher, University of Minnesota
Luisella Giulicchi, European Space Agency
Vinay K. Goyal, The Aerospace Corporation
Michael J. Hirschberg, The Vertical Flight Society
Tristram Tupper Hyde, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Oliver L.P. Masefield, SolvAero Consulting GmbH
Richard G. Morgan, University of Queensland
Natasha A. Neogi, NASA Langley Research Center
Robert Pearce, NASA
Mason Peck, Cornell University
Lisa J. Porter, LogiQ, Inc.
Joseph M. Powers, University of Notre Dame
Michael G. Ryschkewitsch, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Murray L. Scott, Advanced Composite Structures Australia
Philippe R. Spalart, Flexcompute
Paul F. Taylor, Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation
Manuel Torres, Lockheed Martin

Media Contact: Rebecca Gray, [email protected], 804-397-5270

About AIAA
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, visit  aiaa.org, and follow AIAA on X/TwitterFacebookLinkedIn, and Instagram.