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Tue, Mar 17, 2020

Connectivity In The Era Of Flying Taxis

Why Connectivity Is A Core Part Of Urban Air Mobility Infrastructure

Today’s urban air vehicles have been designed to operate with a high degree of autonomy. A robust and reliable connectivity infrastructure is now essential to ensuring these vehicles can safely and efficiently transmit mission-critical data.

By 2025, there could be 3,000 passenger drones, or flying taxis, in use around the world. That figure could swell to 100,000 by 2050, thanks to more sustainable, multimodal mobility networks. The emergence of these new aerial vehicles—an entirely new industry known as urban air mobility (UAM)—is thus adding an exciting new dimension to the urban transportation mix of the future.

"A fast, highly available and secure communication system is essential to interconnect all service providers and to enable interoperability for the reliable exchange of information," said Klaus-Werner Rueger, Senior Expert Data Link & Connectivity, Airbus Urban Mobility.

The anticipated growth in urban air vehicles—most of which will operate with a predefined degree of autonomy, either through self-piloting or remote-piloting from the ground—is also expected to bring significant changes to the way air traffic is managed. In fact, a denser and more diverse use of urban airspace requires a more sophisticated solution to safely coordinate the movement of these vehicles in the air. High-speed, low-latency connectivity is thus expected to play a crucial role in ensuring the timely transmission of mission-critical data relating to their in-flight trajectory.

For self-piloted and remotely piloted aerial vehicles to reach their full potential, they will need to receive vast amounts of data from multiple service providers. This data includes maps, aeronautical databases, weather forecasts, real-time traffic intelligence and situational awareness information. In turn, the aerial vehicles must also be able to transmit information of their own, including positioning and performance data.

“A fast, highly available and secure communication system is essential to interconnect all service providers and to enable interoperability for the reliable exchange information,” says Klaus-Werner Rueger, Senior Expert Data Link & Connectivity, Airbus Urban Mobility.   

This communication system is grouped into two types that require different performance levels from the network: control and non-payload communication, and payload communication. Control and non-payload communication transmits mission-critical control commands to aerial vehicles. This includes flight status, and navigational and telemetry data. High reliability, low latency and security against jamming or hijacking are paramount when transmitting this information. Payload communication includes the remaining mission- and passenger-related data, such as web browsing or vehicle health for predictive maintenance.

(Images provided with Airbus news release)

FMI: www.airbus.com

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