A380 Effect on Capacity
Transcription
A380 Effect on Capacity
The Effect of the Airbus A380 on Runway Passenger Throughput Alexander Donaldson December 8th 2009 1 Background The Airbus A380 can carry the most passengers and is also the heaviest commercial passenger aircraft to have entered service. The entry into service of the aircraft required careful management by the airports, airlines and aviation authorities that would handle the aircraft in order to minimize the disruption caused to the air transportation system. Airports were required to upgrade runways, taxiways and gates to deal with both the size and passenger volume of the A380. The authorities responsible for aviation safety were particularly concerned about the danger posed by the wake of such a high gross weight aircraft and initially took a conservative approach to wake separation standards which could potentially have reduced the passenger capacity at airports served by the A380. This study will examine the tradeoff between the additional passenger capacity of the A380 and the additional wake separation that the aircraft requires. 1.1 The Aircraft The A380 entered into service in October 2006 with Singapore Airlines after an 18 month delay due to a variety of technical issues during development of the aircraft. At the time of writing (November 2009) only 20 A380s have entered service [1], with a production rate of approximately 1 aircraft a month for 2008 and 2009 [2] potentially increasing to 20 deliveries in 2010 [3]. This means that the impact of the A380 on the air transportation system to date has been gradual and sparsely distributed. However as more of these aircraft enter service in the coming years the effect of their operations will become more significant at the major international hubs where they operate. For the purposes of this study the seating capacity of the A380 is an important variable. However there is considerable variability in this value even amongst the 20 aircraft delivered 1 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson 4 + 5 "6" 3. 2. 1. /. . &* +, +- ) % $ ( # &' !"' % #$ " ! . & 0. Figure 1: Current (November 2009) A380 Orders and Deliveries by Airline [1] to date from a minimum of 450 seats in the aircraft operated by Qantas up to 525 seats in the aircraft recently delivered to Air France. This variation in seating capacity makes a significant difference in the runway passenger throughput, therefore the capacity model will be run at these high and low bounds. 1.2 Integration into the Air Transportation System In addition to an unprecedented passenger capacity for a commercial airliner, the size and weight of the A380 brought with it the likelihood of an exceptionally powerful wake. During development of the aircraft and the flight test program the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) recommended a very conservative separation criteria of 10 n.m. for all aircraft following the A380 (Table 1a) on approach, unless that aircraft was another A380 in which case there was no wake separation requirement (the A380 could follow any aircraft including another A380 without any wake separation requirement). Just before the 2 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson entry into service of the A380 the ICAO draft guidance was revised based on the results of an extensive wake vortex measurement campaign carried out by Airbus. The final ICAO guidance was to simply add two nautical miles to the separation required behind a Heavy aircraft (Table 1b. This change in guidance had important implications for the throughput achieved by the A380 as will be demonstrated in this paper. The United Kingdom CAA largely mirrors the ICAO guidance with modifications to fit its own weight categorization scheme (Table 1c). It is interesting to note that the UK CAA found it necessary to revise upwards the ICAO separation guidelines with regard to the A380 as a following aircraft, “based upon operational experience with the aircraft in busy UK terminal airspace environments” [4]. The United States FAA is taking a more conservative approach to A380 operation requiring separations (Table 1d) greater than the ICAO recommendation particularly with regard to Medium and Light aircraft Following the A380. Table 1: Different Approach Separation Standards (R denotes Radar separation minimum applies - 2.5 n.m. for JFK and LHR) A380 R R R R A380 H M L Following H M 10 10 4 5 R R R R (b) Nov. 2009 ICAO Guidance S 10 6 5 R Leading Leading (a) Initial ICAO Guidance 1.3 A380 H UM LM S L A380 4 4 R R R R H 6 4 R R R R Following UM LM 7 7 5 5 3 4 R R R R R R A380 H M L S 8 6 5 R (d) United States FAA S 7 6 4 3 3 R L 8 7 6 5 4 R Leading Leading (c) United Kingdom CAA Following A380 H M R 6 7 R 4 5 R R R R R R A380 H B757 M L A380 6 R R R R Following H B757 6 8 4 5 4 4 R R R R M 8 5 4 R R L 10 6 5 4 R Example Airports The impact of the A380 on three major airports will be examined in this paper. These airports have been chosen because they have different modes of operation and mixes of aircraft sizes, yet they are all expected to receive a significant number of A380 operations in the coming years. 3 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project 1.3.1 Alexander Donaldson London Heathrow London Heathrow will be used as the baseline airport in this study for several reasons: • Large number of expected A380 operations. • Extensive operational data readily available. • Arrivals and departures are always segregated. • Operation at close to runway capacity throughout the day. (22 Oct 09) AD 2-EGLL-2-1 UK AIP LONDON HEATHROW AD ELEV 83FT ARP 512839N 0002741W AERODROME CHART - ICAO EGLL VAR 2.1°W - 2009 HEATHROW I-AA & I-RR 110.30D (Ch 40X) Highest Elev in TDZ 81 512839.15N 0002824.83W (GUND Elevation 151) I-RR 110.30D IRR 512838.88N 0002937.08W Highest Elev in TDZ 79 512839.50N 0002641.18W (GUND Elevation 151) IAA/ IRR 512843.78N 0002732.86W 89' Rwy 09L Thr Elev 79 512839.00N 0002906.05W (GUND Elevation 151) MLS M-HAA Ch 522 Rwy 27R Thr Elev 78 512839.63N 0002559.74W (GUND Elevation 151) I-AA 110.30D IAA 512839.71N 0002537.49W N 130 Annual Rate of Change 0.14°E (47) 117 RVP North 103 (33) ILS GP PAPI (3°) (20) (34) ILS GP MEHT 66 272°M 3901m x 50m 09 L 27 R 092°M k Lin M NEVIS ETTIV MORRA Link 28 Taxiway M Twy A LOKKI Under Under Construction Construction Link N2E ILS GP S1N Tw Tw SURFACE BEARING STRENGTH 83/F/A/W/T 83/F/A/W/T ConcreteAsphalt - Taxiways Concrete/Asphalt - 100 500 0 0 100 200 500 (36) Lin k 43 SB1 Rwy 27L Thr Elev 77 512753.83N 0002602.68W (GUND Elevation 151) Link 41 Link 44 W RUNWAY/TAXIWAY/APRON PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS Grooved Asphalt (35) 119 ay 42 Ta xiw Lin k Taxi T way V S1S COM Terminal 4 ATIS TWR Highest Elev in TDZ 78 512753.67N 0002651.99W (GUND Elevation 151) RVP South ay xiw Ta T HEATHROW Grooved Asphalt 118 272°M MEHT 64 Twy S ay xiw Royal Suite PAPI (3°) S3 Taxiway S Ta Cargo Apron 362 (279) RWY 09R/27L IRR 27 L SB3 Cargo Apron Highest Elev in TDZ 76 512753.39N 0002816.43W (GUND Elevation 151) Aprons I-BB 109.50D 512753.86N 0002542.15W N1 NB1 NB2E S4 BEARINGS ARE MAGNETIC ELEVATIONS AND HEIGHTS ARE IN FEET APRON / RWY / TWY MLS M-HBB Ch 514 28 Twy Q Twy R Taxiway Z Rwy 09R Thr Elev 75 512753.25N 0002856.41W (GUND Elevation 151) ELEVATIONS IN FEET AMSL HEIGHTS IN FEET ABOVE AD 221 (138) Maintenance Area 1 Link 27 N4E Taxiway S Southern Fuel Farm 512753.14N 0002928.03W GUND (Geoid Undulation) = The height of the Geoid (MSL) above the Reference Elipsoid (WGS 84) at the stated position. (43) Tw y L pie r ay ro iw Eu Ta x 29 k Lin ay Ta x R iw ay A Link 26 Link 26 Under Construction Tw P y Link 2 Twy N4W S5 S6 S7 (42) Taxiway S 126 Maintenance Area 1 U xiw L P y Tw Ta ILS GP S11 Link 22 F L1 ay 09 R SY6 125 ILL 105 (22) M1 SATUN Link 25 3660m x 50m SB7 (18) I-LL 109.50D Snow Base AY1 RVP East Twy A ay Link 32 Link 33 N5E Link 21 Twy B r7 x N5W yA G Ta xiw Twy A N6 AY3 Twy L r5 ay Link 34 Twy A Under Construction TITAN B Pie H ay xiw Under Construction Pie Ta r2 xiw Pie ay r1 Q A2 Tw T MEHT 67 101 RWY 09L/27R Under Construction Terminal 2 Pier 6 Taxiway B Twy D x 092°M (22) r3 Pie Terminal 1 (143) F1 E1 Taxiway B N7 xi r4 Ta Pie Under Construction Radar 226 PLUTO wy yJ wa Terminal 3 Link 35 D1 A5 L2 Ta xiw Ta Pie T5C Twy C Taxi RVP NB11 West Taxiway B xiw Ta Taxiway F 362 (279) Link 36 Taxiway D Terminal 5B Taxiway C VIKAS C1 OSTER Link xiw Taxiway B Link 53 ay B 53 Link HORKA 51 wa Taxiway A Link 52 yA Disused N8 N10 PAPI (3°) NB8 NB10 Twy Y 105 (17) Twy G Control Tower Twy Y DASSO N11 100 Fire Station Ta MLS M-HRL Ch 514 Taxiway B Taxiway A Car Park Terminal 5A Link 54 Taxiway Y HANLI Under Construction F2 AY5 Taxiway A Pier 4A E2 Taxiway E Link 55 Link 13 Twy L D2 Taxiway D C2 DINGO A6 A7 Link 12 Link 11 Taxiway B A1 A4 A3 AY4 MEHT 73 A8 A9E A9W Taxiway A AY10 Northern Fuel Farm Twy J COBRA A10E A10W A11 Taxiway A Taxiway B yB PAPI (3°) ARP AB11 A12 RABIT Twy D Link 58 Twy C yA Twy H Link 57 Link 56 Link 23 SNAPA A13 9 AB12 AB13 MLS M-HER Ch 522 23 116 300 1000 400 500m 1500ft I-BB & I-LL 109.50D (Ch 32X) IBB/ ILL 512749.56N 0002730.77W 92' CHANGE: AREAS UNDER CONSTRUCTION ADDED/AMENDED/REMOVED. TWY A EXTENDED (TO THE SOUTH). HOLDS N3/NB3/N2W & TWY N REMOVED. LINK 28/HOLD N2E/NB2E/NEW ACCESS TO RWY 27L/REPORTING POINT L2 ADDED. 128.075, 113.750, 115.100 (Arrival) 121.935 (Departure) 118.700, 118.500, 124.475 HEATHROW INFO HEATHROW TOWER 121.975 (GM Planning) HEATHROW DELIVERY 121.900, 121.700, 121.850 (GMC) HEATHROW GROUND 121.600 HEATHROW FIRE LIGHTING THR 09L 09R THR 27L 27R HI Green with HI W bars. HI Green with HI W bars. RWY 09L HI bi-d colour coded C/L. TDZ 900m. HI bi-d white edge (first 300m Red). End lights red. RWY 27R HI bi-d colour coded C/L. TDZ 901m. HI bi-d white edge. End lights red. RWY 09R HI bi-d colour coded C/L. TDZ 899m. HI bi-d white edge (first 300m Red). End lights red. RWY 27L HI bi-d colour coded C/L. TDZ 901m. HI bi-d white edge. End lights red. TWY Green C/L and Red stop bars with selective switching on all taxiway routes. AERO INFO DATE 17 AUG 09 Civil Aviation Authority AMDT 11/09 Figure 2: London Heathrow Airport Layout[5] In November 2009 London Heathrow accommodated 4 daily Heathrow operations (2 flights to Singapore, one to Dubai and one to Sydney), this figure will rise substantially as Airbus delivers more aircraft across the world given that Heathrow is a major international hub. Heathrow is also likely be the base of operations for the 18 A380s to be operated by British Airways and Virgin Atlantic. In addition to the volume volume of future A380 operations Heathrow is a useful baseline airport given the wealth of data available about operations at the airport as well as the simple operational modes of its runways. Heathrow always operates one runway for arrivals and one runway for departures (to minimize the noise impact on communities under the approach path [6]). Heathrow also operates close to its runway capacity for most of the day due to slot controls at the airport. These factors 4 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson together mean that a simple runway capacity model described in Section 2.1 should yield an accurate estimate of arrival capacity at Heathrow. 1.3.2 New York JFK An American airport was included in the study in order to examine the effects of the more stringent separation requirements impose by the FAA as well as the effect of the lower aircraft size seen on average in the U.S. New York JFK (JFK) is likely to be one of the top U.S airports in terms of A380 operations1 . JFK is also an interesting contrast to London Heathrow because its runways are frequently operated in a mixed-mode configuration, with arrivals and departures sharing the same runway. 392 X 2 6 ELEV 13 ZA 31R FB C YA 840 X 20 H D JOHN F. KEN EDY INTL F C Y WA W CA V VA A B B NEW YORK / V CB U G B H UA 13L U A U V HOLDING INSTRUCTIONS IS REQUIRED. READBACK OF AL RUNWAY RUNWAY CROS ING CLEARANCES. CB CAUTION: BE ALERT TO Z 73^48’W 10 0 X 150 134.1^ C NEW YORK / S10 , D185, ST175, DT5 0, DDT823 2 4.1^ EA DA W A CB CD A B RWYS 4R-2 L, 4L-2 R, 13R-31L, 13L-31R ZA D E CE JOHN F. KEN EDY INTL B B C F W C Y H ELEV 13 FA YA C 73^45’W CH E Rwys 4R-2 L and 13L-31R FB Rwys 4L-2 R and 13R-31L E 314.1^ NEW YORK, NEW YORK 2 4.1^ ELEV 12 KENNEDY TOWER ATIS ARR 128.725 2R NEW YORK, NEW YORK (JFK) EMAS 40^39’N STATION AUX FIRE 40^40’N CLNC DEL GND CON 121.9 348.6 123.9 281.5 135.05 348.6 DEP 1 5.1 1 9.1 281.5 NE 1 7.7 E SW 1 5.4 2L (JFK) D NE-2, 17 DEC 2009 to 14 JAN 2010 E FB G TB Y J 1 351 X 150 CONTROL 04 .1^ Z 31L U.S CUSTOMS A ARRIVAL TERMINAL KA K N LA CAT 2 NA K M MA FIRE STATION N 405 X 2 7 EMAS 73^49’W P QB KB K 04 .1^ PA QC H 14572 X 150 P 40^37’N QD PB Q 13 73^46’W L B L KC B MB Q B K NB NC SB A A A A 4R FIELD ELEV R R SA 314.1^ HOLD S INTERNATIONAL KD H B A J Z S SC ELEV 12 B R A A P PC QF K1 4L JANUARY 20 5 AIRPORT DIAGRAM 09351 73^47’W 40^38’N 12 ELEV GENERAL AVIATION TERMINAL VAR 13.3 ^W AIRPORT DIAGRAM 134.0^ 09351 ELEV 12 13R Q ANNUAL RATE OF CHANGE H PE 0.0^E PD QH QG Q P with Mode C on al twys and rwys. 38 TOWER B T SD H Pilots should operate transponders B 197 S SE Z AL-610 (FA ) ASDE-X Surveil ance System in use. H A ELEV 13 TA T Y Z A NE-2, 17 DEC 2009 to 14 JAN 2010 Figure 3: New York JFK Airport Layout[7] 1.3.3 Dubai International Dubai International Airport (DXB) was chosen as the third airport in this study due to the potentially unmatched future level of A380 operations asa result of Emirates Airlines 1 Los Angeles International (LAX) my handle more A380s however it was not used in this study due to the complications imposed on A380 operations by its closely spaced parallel runways and the uncertainty surrounding the resolution of these issues. 5 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson (based at DXB) large order for 58 of the type (Figure 1). The airport also adds a third distinct separation standard by applying the ICAO recommendations without modification. Like JFK, Dubai International has a pair of parallel runways assumed to be operating independently with mixed arrivals and departures for the purposes of this study. CHANGES: Twyr. I 8 JEPPESEN SANDER%M, INC., 1007. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. I Figure 4: Dubai International Airport Layout 2 Methodology This study compares the passenger throughput and arrival capacity of the three study airports for the three cases of moving heavy operations to a 525 seat A380, a 450 seat A380 and a 418 seat 747-400. The A380 cases include the appropriate higher wake separation criteria required by that type of aircraft, while the 747-400 case reflects a simple “upgauging” of the heavy category aircraft with no additional separation required. The second part of the study looks only at LHR and compares the effect of applying the four different described in Table 1 to the LHR operations to examine the behavior of these criteria for a common set of operations. 2.1 Runway Capacity Model Simple queueing theory will be used to model runway capacity of the airports being studied, using the model described in de Neufville and Odoni [8]. The time separation (in seconds) 6 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson between a lead aircraft in weight category i and a following aircraft in category j can be found from Equation 1. r + sij r − , od2 + max(oi , od1 ) for vi > vj Tij = max 3600 vj vi (1) sij Tij = max 3600 , od2 + max(oi , od1 ) for vi ≤ vj vj The time required per arriving passenger (in seconds) can then be calculated for different sequences of arriving aircraft as shown in Equation 2. Tpax,ij = Tij ci (2) Given Tij and Tpax,ij it is possible to calculate the airport arrival capacity using the matrix of likelihoods of any given pair of arrivals (pij ). 2.2 Cops = 3600(nr ) PK PK j=1 (pij · Tij ) i=1 (3) Cpax = 3600(nr ) PK PK i=1 j=1 (pij · Tpax,ij ) (4) Model Inputs The required inputs for the runway capacity model were collected from a wide variety of data sources with reasonable assumptions being made where data was unavailable. The model inputs are summarized in Table 2 and where appropriate are further explained in this section. 2.2.1 Final Approach Path Length The final approach path length (r) is the distance over which air traffic control can no longer separate aircraft based on speed since the aircraft are preparing to land. At London Heathrow this distance is a minimum of 4 n.m.[9] and at JFK it is 5n.m[10]. The approach path length for Dubai International could not be found and was therefore assumed to be the same as used at JFK so as not to introduce an unnecessary additional variable. 7 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson Table 2: Summary of Inputs to the runway capacity model Approach Length (r) Buffer time (bi ) Number of Runways(nr ) Separation (sij ) LHR JFK DBX 4 n.m. UK CAA[9] 5 n.m. FAA[10] 5 n.m. Assumed 10 seconds (Assumed) [8] 1 segregated UK CAA (Table 1c) Approach Velocity (vi ) Aircraft Mix (pij ) Arrival Occupancy Time (oa ) Departure set-up time for (od1 ) Departures roll time (od2 ) Passenger Capacity (ci ) 2.2.2 2 mixed independent US FAA (Table 1d) ICAO (Table 1b) Based only on Boeing aircraft in schedule 2008 Flight Timetable (4 week sample) 2008 ETMS Database (4 week sample) 2004 Annual Operations Based on data from LHR Study Not Needed 45 s (Assumed) [8] Not Needed 60 s (Assumed) [8] Aircraft manufacturer data for typical multi-class configuration Approach Velocity Aircraft approach velocities vary significantly depending on the weight of the individual arriving aircraft, because of this it is a difficult process to estimate actual approach velocities. Boeing provides a document [11] with reference approach speeds which was used to estimate speeds for this study. The Boeing speeds were applied to all Boeing aircraft (by sub-type e.g. 737-800) in the operational data sets and then averaged over the weight categories in use at each of the study airports. Aircraft that were not manufactured by Boeing or McDonald Douglas were not included in the approach speed calculation. This method provides a reasonable estimate for the approach speeds given the large number of Boeing aircraft represented at the study airports and the wide range of weights of these aircraft. 8 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project 2.2.3 Alexander Donaldson Aircraft Mix The probability (pi )of any given arrival being from a certain weight category is assumed to be equal to the proportion of all arrivals that are from that weight category. For LHR and JFK the proportion of aircraft from each weight category was estimated through examination of 4 weeks of arrivals information from 2008. The first week in February, May, August and November were chosen to provide a mix of different travel seasons while avoiding the holiday period. For DXB only aggregate data from 2004 was available. Given the already high proportion of heavy jets in this data no additional scaling was performed to adjust the mix of aircraft to 2008 levels. Once the probability vectors were compiled the probability of observing a pair of arrivals i followed by j is simply obtained by multiplying together the two probabilities pi and pj . H B757 H B757 M L H M S H H UM LM S L M LM M S S L L UM H The measured values of pi are shown in Figure 5. It is important to note the proportion of heavy aircraft at each airport, with DXB having significantly more heavy arrivals than JFK and LHR. A380 operations were simulated by moving a percentage of the heavy operations at each airport to A380 operations. The model was run for up to half of the heavy operation at each airport being converted to A380s. (a) At LHR (b) At JFK (c) At DXB Figure 5: Distribution of aircraft weight categories at each study airport 2.2.4 Arrival Runway Occupancy Time A study conducted in 2005 at LHR [12] measured the runway occupancy times for 170 arrivals at London Heathrow for a wide range of different aircraft types and was conducted during good visibility for a dry runway. The results of this study were averaged across the weight categories appropriate for LHR, JFK and DXB. Given that runway occupancy 9 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson time measurements for JFK and DXB were not readily available this data provides realistic estimate of those times and was therefore used across all the airports in this study. The actual runway occupancy time may vary based on actual taxiway geometry and how expeditiously pilots vacate the runway. 2.2.5 Departure Runway Occupancy Time Data could not be found for the runway occupancy time of departing aircraft, therefore the estimates given in de Neufville and Odoni [8] were used. These 3 3.1 Results Impact at Different Airports The runway capacity model was run using the inputs described in Section 2.2, for both low (450 seats) and typical (525 seats) aircraft passenger capacities as well as a baseline 747-400 with 418 seats. The results of this analysis are compared in Figure 6 and in detail for each airport in Figure 7. The results show that runway passenger throughput does increase in all cases however in the lower capacity A380 case the gains are marginal. Any gains in passenger capacity come at a cost in terms of operations per hour. The comparison with the 747-400 shows that in all cases a move to 747-400s (which have no addition separation requirements) would increase the passenger throughput more than any of the A380 configurations modeled. This implies that if passenger throughput were the only motivation for customers of the A380 then a high capacity Heavy aircraft would better suit their needs. Fortunately for Airbus the A380 has other economic, environmental and passenger comfort benefits over other Heavy aircraft.currently on the market 10 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson Airport Airravl Passenger Capacity (per hour) 9000 LHR-High JFK-High DXB-High LHR-Low JFK-Low DXB-Low LHR-747 JFK-747 DXB-747 8500 8000 7500 7000 6500 6000 5500 50000 2 4 6 8 10 Hourly Arrivals (All runways) 12 14 Figure 6: Comparison of the effect of the A380 on operations at LHR, JFK and DXB for 450 seat and 525 seat variants of the A380 and a 416 seat 747-400 11 of 15 61 60 59 58 57 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Hourly A380 Arrivals (All runways) 956 6800 35.0 6750 34.5 6700 34.0 33.5 6650 66000 (a) At LHR 33.0 1 4 5 2 3 Hourly A380 Arrivals (All runways) 632.5 (b) At JFK 5300 57 5250 56 55 Arrivals per Hour Arrival Passenger Capacity (per hour) 35.5 Arrivals per Hour 62 Arrival Passenger Capacity (per hour) 8780 8760 8740 8720 8700 8680 8660 8640 86200 Alexander Donaldson Arrivals per Hour Arrival Passenger Capacity (per hour) Airport Systems: Term Project 5200 54 5150 53 5100 50500 52 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 1851 Hourly A380 Arrivals (All runways) (c) At DXB Figure 7: Impact of A380 Operations on Arrival Capacity in terms of operations (black) and passengers (colored - light: 450 seat A380, dark: 525 seat A380) 12 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project 3.2 Alexander Donaldson Effect of Different Separation Criteria The comparison of the effect of different separation criteria Figure 8 shows considerable variability in the effect of the different criteria on a common set of operational data. It is particularly clear why the ICAO interim guidance was revised just before the A380 entered service - the interim guidance would have caused a substantial loss in passenger throughput (difference between red and gray line in Figure 8). Also of note is the fact that the conservative FAA guidance leads to a reduction in throughput for the low density A380 configuration when applied to Heathrow. These results highlight the importance for regulatory agencies for finding the right balance between ensuring safety and improving the efficiency of the air transportation system. Airport Airravl Passenger Capacity (per hour) 8200 8000 7800 7600 7400 UK-High US-High ICAO Ini-High ICAO Final-High UK-Low US-Low ICAO Ini-Low ICAO Final-Low 7200 7000 6800 66000 2 4 6 Hourly A380 Arrivals (All runways) 8 10 Figure 8: Comparison of the effect on operations at LHR of different separation criteria (UK CAA, US FAA, ICAO initial and ICAO final guidance) 13 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project 4 Alexander Donaldson Conclusions This study has shown that the A380 does not have a detrimental impact on passenger throughput as some members of the aviation industry had fear it would. The increasing numbers of A380 operations at hub airports around the world will however have a significant impact on the breakdown of their traffic by weight category. Major international hubs will operate most efficiently if the traffic mix is heavily weighted towards Heavy and A380 category aircraft. For airports (such as JFK) that expect to continue operating a substantial number of lighter aircraft as well as several A380 operations careful management of the A380 operation will be required to ensure that the new aircraft has a positive impact on their airport. 14 of 15 Airport Systems: Term Project Alexander Donaldson References [1] Airbus. Orders and deliveries spreadsheet. http://www.airbus.com/fileadmin/ backstage/documents/od/November1_2009.xls, November 2009. [2] Max Kingsley-Jones. Dubai 09: Airbus set to decide on A380 production revamp. http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2009/11/17/335080/dubai-09airbus-set-to-decide-on-a380-production-revamp.html, November 2009. [3] Max Kingsley-Jones. Airbus slows A380 final assembly ramp-up. http: //www.flightglobal.com/articles/2009/05/14/326416/airbus-slows-a380final-assembly-ramp-up.html, May 2009. [4] David Kaminski-Morrow. http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2009/01/26/ 321601/uk-rethinks-a380-wake-separation-from-heavy-jets.html, January 2009. [5] Civil Aviation Authority. London heathrow aerodrome chart. http://www.natsuk.ead-it.com/aip/current/ad/EGLL/EG_AD_2_EGLL_2-1_en.pdf, August 2009. [6] BAA. BAA heathrow website: Mixed mode. http://www.heathrowairport. com/portal/page/Heathrow%5EGeneral%5EOur+business+and+community% 5EFuture+growth%5EMixed+mode/1c8851dcd7423110VgnVCM10000036821c0a___ _/448c6a4c7f1b0010VgnVCM200000357e120a____/. [7] FAA. New York JFK airport diagram. http://www.naco.faa.gov/d-tpp/0913/ 00610AD.PDF, December 2009. [8] R. De Neufville and A.R. Odoni. Airport systems: Planning, design, and management. McGraw-Hill Professional, 2002. [9] Safety Regulation Group. CAP 493 Manual of Air Traffic Services Part 1. Civil Aviation Authority, November 2009. [10] Federal Aviation Administration. Order JO 7110.65S Air Traffic Control, change 1 edition, February 2008. [11] Boeing. Airport reference code and approach speeds for boeing airplanes. http: //www.boeing.com/commercial/airports/faqs/arcandapproachspeeds.pdf, August 2007. [12] British Airways and BAA Heathrow. Results from two surveys of the use of reverse thrust of aircraft landing at heathrow airport. http://www.dft.gov.uk/adobepdf/ 165217/282786/6_ENV1128.pdf, November 2005. 15 of 15