Analysis

TV signals could be used to track aircraft

17th June 2015
Siobhan O'Gorman
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Standard TV signals could one day be used for tracking aircraft, following a proof of concept trial led by air traffic control company NATS, in conjunction with Thales ATM UK and Roke Manor.

For two years, NATS has been testing whether the same signals delivered to televisions across the country could simultaneously be used to detect and direct aircraft.

The trial, part funded by Innovate UK, was carried out primarily over London with a Thales concept demonstrator using signals from the Crystal Palace transmitter. The results of the trials were then validated by Roke Manor. Up to 30 aircraft were tracked at any one time at altitudes of up to 10,000 feet, although more would have been possible had additional equipment been used.

The results demonstrate that not only can TV transmissions be used to locate aircraft; they can do it well enough to meet the standard separation requirements for air traffic control of three or five nautical miles. That makes TV signals a potentially viable alternative to radar.

The concept works in exactly the same way as traditional radar, where a beam of radio energy, in this case a TV signal, is sent out and reflected by an aircraft. Specialist receivers then measure the directions of the signal echoes and the time taken for them to arrive in order to calculate the aircraft’s location.

A second phase of the trial in Liverpool also demonstrated that the signals were seemingly less susceptible to the interference wind turbines cause to traditional radar, an issue that has affected the renewables industry in recent years.

However, despite the excitement, NATS admits a lot of work still needs to be done before the X Factor is being used to direct the 8.25 from Glasgow to Heathrow.

Nick Young, System Engineer, NATS, said: “It may sound incredible, but we’ve been able to prove this really works and could one day be a real alternative or complement to using standard primary radar. The benefits could be enormous, including big reductions in the cost of ground based infrastructure.”

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