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WAAS Performances
WAAS | |
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Title | WAAS Performances |
Author(s) | GMV |
Level | Basic |
Year of Publication | 2011 |
The Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) is the United States Satellite Based Augmentation System. The programme, started in 1992, is being carried out by the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA)[1] and is specially developed for the civil aviation community.[2] The system, which was declared operational in late 2003,[3] currently supports thousands of aircraft instrument approaches in more than one thousand airports in USA and Canada.[4] WAAS service area includes CONUS, Alaska, Canada and Mexico.[5] The WAAS programme is continuously in evolution; two development phases have been already covered, a third is in progress, and there are plans to improve the capability of the system in parallel with the evolution of the SBAS standards towards a dual-frequency augmentation service.[6]
WAAS Performances
Satellite Based Augmentation Systems (SBAS) performances are usually described in terms of integrity, accuracy, availability, and continuity. The WAAS specification performance requirements[7] depend on the phase of the flight: 1) en route through non-precision approach (NPA) and 2) precision approach.
According to its specification document, WAAS performance requirements are the following:[7]
- 1. WAAS Performance Requirements for En Route through 'Non-Precision Approach'
Performance Requirement | Total System | Navigation System | WAAS Signal-in-Space | Airborne |
---|---|---|---|---|
Availability | 0.99999 | 0.99999 | 0.99999 | N/S |
Accuracy 95% Horizontal Position 99.999% Horizontal Position 95% Vertical Position 95% Pseudorange |
N/S N/S N/A N/A |
100 m 500 m N/A N/S |
N/S N/S N/A N/S |
N/S N/S N/A 1.2 m |
Integrity Integrity Risk Time-to-Alarm |
N/S 10 s |
N/S 10 s |
10-7/hour 8 s |
N/S 2 s |
Continuity Continuity of Navigation Continuity of Fault Detection (1) |
1 - 10-5/hour 1 - (2x10-5)/hour |
1 - 10-5/hour 1 - (2x10-5)/hour |
1 - 10-8/hour 1 - 10-5/hour |
1 - 10-5/hour 1 - 10-5/hour |
- (1) Excluding outages of less than 5 minutes.
- 2. WAAS Performance Requirements for Precision Approach
Performance Requirement | Total System | Navigation System | GPS/WAAS Signal-in-Space | Airborne |
---|---|---|---|---|
Availability | N/S | N/S | 0.999 | N/S |
Accuracy 95% Horizontal Position 95% Vertical Position 95% Pseudorange |
33.5 m 9.8 m N/A |
7.6 m 7.6 m N/S |
N/S N/S N/S |
N/S N/S 1.2 m |
Integrity Integrity Risk Time-to-Alarm |
N/S N/S |
N/S N/S |
10-7/approach 5.2 s |
N/S N/S |
Continuity Continuity of Navigation Continuity of Fault Detection |
1 - 10-4/approach N/S N/S |
1 - 10-4/approach N/S N/S |
1 - (5.5x10-5)/approach N/S N/S |
1 - (4.5x10-5)/approach N/S N/S |
- N/S stands for Not Specified.
- N/A stands for Not Applicable.
On July 10, 2003, the WAAS system was certified for for safety-of-life aviation, covering 95% of the United States, and portions of Alaska [3][8]. At present, WAAS supports en-route, terminal and approach operations down to a full LPV-200 (CAT-I like Approach Capability) for the CONUS, Mexico and Canada. Typical performances provided by WAAS System when considering operating in LPV (Horizontal Alarm Limit = 40 m , Vertical Alarm Limit =50 m) are shown in next figure:[9]
WAAS Signal-In-Space Performance Requirements
Satellite Based Augmentation Systems (SBAS) performances are usually described in terms of integrity, accuracy, availability, and continuity. According to the WAAS peformance standard[10] WAAS service area is divided in five coverage zones:
- Zone 1: CONUS.
- Zone 2: Alaska.
- Zone 3: Hawaii.
- Zone 4: Puerto Rico and some other Caribbean islands.
- Zone 5: US territory excluding zones 1 to 4.
The volume covered includes a region up to 100.000 feet above the surface. For zones 1 to 4, the area extends up to 30 nm outside the land.
WAAS specification distiguishes the following flight phases:
- En route
- Terminal
- LNAV (Lateral Navigation)
- LNAV/VNAV (Lateral Navigation/Vertical Navigation)
- LPV (Localizer Performance with Vertical guidance)
- LPV 200 (LPV 200 foot minimum)
The requirements considering the different flight phases and the different coverage zones are summarised in the next table:[10]
En Route | Terminal | LNAV | LNAV/VNAV | LPV | LPV 200 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TTA | 15 s | 15 s | 10 s | 10 s | 6.2 s | 6.2 s |
HAL | 2 nm | 1 nm | 556 m | 556 m | 40 m | 40 m |
VAL | N/A | N/A | N/A | 50 m | 50 m | 35 m |
Probability of HMI | 10-7 per hour | 10-7 per hour | 10-7 per hour | 2 x 10-7 per approach | 2 x 10-7 per approach (150 seconds) | 2 x 10-7 per approach (150 seconds) |
Zone 1 Continuity | 1 - 10-5 per hour | 1 - 10-5 per hour | 1 - 10-5 per hour | 1 - 5.5 x 10-5/15 seconds | 1 - 8 x 10-6/15 seconds | 1 - 8 x 10-6/15 seconds |
Horizontal Accuracy (95%) | 0.4 nm | 0.4 nm | 220 m | 220 m | 16 m | 16 m |
Vertical Accuracy (95%) | N/A | N/A | N/A | 20 m | 20 m | 4 m |
Availability (Zone 1 Coverage) | 0.99999 (100%) | 0.99999 (100%) | 0.99999 (100%) | 0.99 (100%) | 0.99 (80-100%) | 0.99 (40-60%) |
Availability (Zone 2 Coverage) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.95 (75%) | 0.95 (75%) | N/A |
Availability (Zone 3 Coverage) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Availability (Zone 4 Coverage) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Availability (Zone 5 Coverage) | 0.99999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | 0.999 (100%) | N/A | N/A | N/A |
In this table, the integrity requirements are given as the probability of HMI, namely Hazardously Misleading Information. In addition to integrity, accuracy, availability and continuity, the table shows the specification for Time To Alert (TTA) and for Horizontal and Vertical Alert Limits (HAL and VAL).
Notes
References
- ^ Navigation Services - History - Satellite Navigation, FAA.
- ^ Navigation Services - Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS), FAA.
- ^ a b Wide Area Differential GPS (WADGPS), Stanford University
- ^ GNSS - GPS/WAAS Approaches, Federal Aviation Agency (FAA).
- ^ WAAS Service Expanded into Canada and Mexico, September 28, 2007, Federal Aviation Agency (FAA).
- ^ SatNav News, Vol. 33, March 2008, Federal Aviation Agency (FAA).
- ^ a b Specification for the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS), FAA-E- 2892b, August 13, 2001, FAA.
- ^ Wide Area Augmentation System
- ^ FAA Monitoring WAAS Performances in Real-Time
- ^ a b Global Positioning System Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) Performance Standard, Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration, USA, 1st Edition, 31 October 2008.