Satellite Airliner Tracking Over Oceans Goes Global (bbc.com) 57
dryriver shares a report from the BBC: Tracking airplanes anywhere in the world just got a lot easier. The U.S. firm Aireon says its new satellite surveillance network is now fully live and being trialled over the North Atlantic. The system employs a constellation of 66 (Iridium) spacecraft, which monitor the situational messages pumped out by aircraft transponders. These report a plane's position, altitude, direction and speed every eight seconds. The two big navigation management companies that marshal plane movements across the North Atlantic -- UK Nats and Nav Canada -- intend to use Aireon to transform their operations. The more detailed information they now have about the behavior of airplanes means more efficient routing can be introduced. This ought to reduce costs for airlines. Passengers should also experience fewer delays. Aireon has receivers riding piggyback on all 66 spacecraft of the Iridium sat-phone service provider. These sensors make it possible now to track planes even out over the ocean, beyond the visibility of radar -- and ocean waters cover 70% of the globe. The rapid-fire nature of the messaging also means aircraft visibility is virtually continuous. Existing data links only report ocean-crossing aircraft positions every 14 minutes. '
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Everyone likes options.
If I'm on a plane over the ocean and the transponder starts arcing and smoking I sure as hell want the cockpit to have the "option" to pull a breaker and kill electric power to it.
The flight crew should have control over every system on an aircraft I'm on, full stop.
It's no different from the fact that the cockpit can switch off all the engines if they deem it necessary.
Re: (Score:2)
January 11 was four days ago?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Falcon_9_and_Falcon_Heavy_launches#Future_launches [wikipedia.org]
ships have almost real-time tracking (Score:3, Informative)
It seems ships have had a decent tracking system in place for a while now. See https://www.marinetraffic.com/ [marinetraffic.com] .. many update every 2 minutes.
With planes I could track almost real-time a relative's long-haul flight. So something already exists for aircraft too. The change here must therefore be that the ping is wired-in mandatory and not subject to a pilot flipping the switch to off.
Re:ships have almost real-time tracking (Score:4, Insightful)
What this system provides is global coverage of ADS-B receivers, that's all.
Re: (Score:2)
I guess it's easier to have a nice big antenna on a ship. Aircraft need to consider aerodynamics and increased fuel consumption when attaching anything like that.
If you can have a nice big antenna you can use lower frequency, longer range signals and avoid the need for expensive satellite comms. Or you could have fewer satellites to get the same coverage.
I'm just guessing.
Re: (Score:2)
The change is that this used to be an upsell from the manufacturer. Upsells have a bad rap these days.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Budget airlines would however never purchase such options.
It probably should have been made mandatory for flights involving many passengers some time ago.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
using satellite tracking involves having and deploying satellites which isnâ(TM)t free. Costs are something like $20-30M per launch not including the cost of the satellite.
The US government has been keeping Iridium around for its own purposes, so it's been available for tasks just such as this all along.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Iridium is semi-public because they went bankrupt years ago and the DoD bought up a lot of the assets. They do have a commercial division and you can still get Iridium phones and pagers (and modems).
With the usual exemptions... (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
>US and European regulators have mandated all aircraft carry this equipment as of next year. Surely with the exception of all military planes, a bunch of CIA-owned planes and a bunch of private planes owned by the dark state puppet masters.
Most of these military birds carry some sort of gear like this although the Russian recon birds sometimes turn it off and fly through the commercial air lanes just to ruin your day and royally piss everybody off. If you are worried about the 'gubbermint' and their grey alien overlords tracking you, you can try wrapping your plane in aluminium foil :-)
Re: (Score:2)
You are talking about the transponder. That's not quite the same thing.
Another win for capitalism (Score:1)
Nav Canada was privatized by the Canadian government about 25 years ago and it's been hitting homeruns ever since.
The US federal government could learn from this great example.
Excellent. VERY much needed. (Score:2)
Excellent. VERY much needed. Not knowing where an aircraft was when it crashed was weird.
Before: Airplanes can vanish without a trace. Why is effective tracking technology being ignored? [airspacemag.com] (Nov. 2011)
Plane Crash Info [slashdot.org]
Why, after many, many years, flight recorders are still being destroyed? Both recorders from Boeing 737 recovered but 'partly destroyed', airline official says, as search for bodies continues. [aljazeera.com] (Mar 11, 2019)
Re: (Score:1)
The thing is though, this is really only useful over open ocean (systems can already track them fine with ADS-B over land). And over open ocean, it can still take years for black box recovery (as was the case with Air France flight 447, where they knew the location, but a lot of water didn't help).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_France_Flight_447
Re:Excellent. VERY much needed. (Score:4, Informative)
In principle, once you have the continuous communication anywhere in the world, you can program the transponders to start churning out black-box type telemetry whenever a dangerous anomalous condition is detected in the plane (e.g. stall, upset, fire.) So it is a somewhat separate issue, rather than a completely separate issue.
Such emergency uploads aren't going to eliminate the need for black boxes: the bandwidth won't be available to transmit everything, and sometimes the vital clue is something that happened 30 minutes before the crash. (And sometimes the interval between detecting 'something is wrong' and total destruction is a few seconds.)
MOD parent up. (Score:2)
Really? (Score:3)
Often on Slashdot: Lack of social ability. (Score:2)
Instead of asking how I would accomplish the loss of flight recorder data, the AC who replied in the parent comment assumes that he (or she) knows everything.
Here are some ideas about avoiding the loss of flight recorder data:
1) There should be perhaps 4 flight recorders, located in the airplane in different positions.
2) There should be 2 more flight recorders that are ejected with parachutes when the
AI (Score:2)