Abstract

Airport surface movement operations are complex processes with many types of adverse events which require resilient, safe, and efficient responses. One regularly occurring adverse event is that of runway reconfiguration. Agent-based distributed planning and coordination has shown promising results in controlling operations in complex systems, especially during disturbances. In contrast to the centralised approaches, distributed planning is performed by several agents, which coordinate plans with each other. This research evaluates the contribution of agent-based distributed planning and coordination to the resilience of airport surface movement operations when runway reconfigurations occur. An autonomous Multi-Agent System (MAS) model was created based on the layout and airport surface movement operations of Schiphol Airport in the Netherlands. Within the MAS model, three distributed planning and coordination mechanisms were incorporated, based on the Conflict-Based Search (CBS) Multi-Agent Path Finding (MAPF) algorithm and adaptive highways. MAS simulations were run based on eight days of real-world operational data from Schiphol Airport and the results of the autonomous MAS simulations were compared to the performance of the real-world human operated system. The MAS results show that the distributed planning and coordination mechanisms were effective in contributing to the resilient behaviour of the airport surface movement operations, closely following the real-world behaviour, and sometimes even surpassing it. In particular, the mechanisms were found to contribute to more resilient behaviour than the real-world when considering the taxi time after runway reconfiguration events. Finally, the highway included distributed planning and coordination mechanisms contributed to the most resilient behaviour of the airport surface movement operations.

Highlights

  • Airport surface movement operations are complex processes, which are constantly exposed to different types of adverse events

  • The main focus of the analysis of the results is to evaluate the contribution of the three distributed planning and coordination mechanisms to the resilience of the airport surface movement operations, using the Multi-Agent System (MAS) model outputs

  • The results showed that there were almost no differences with respect to the average taxi distance per day. This was further confirmed by the A-test value of, on average, 0.50 for all mechanisms. These results show that applying these types of distributed planning and coordination mechanisms may be beneficial to improving the performance of average taxi time of the airport surface movement operations

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Summary

Introduction

Airport surface movement operations are complex processes, which are constantly exposed to different types of adverse events. One regularly occurring adverse event that the airport surface movement system must be able to cope with is that of runway reconfigurations. Different aircraft taxi routings may be needed, or new traffic streams may suddenly emerge, which require modifications in the handling of the altered traffic flows. These adaptations of the airport surface movement operations should be done in a resilient, safe, and efficient manner, to achieve the fundamental goals of air traffic services [1,2,3,4,5,6] including reducing CO2 emissions [7].

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