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    기술보고서 게시판 내용
    타이틀 Examination of Icing Induced Loss of Control and Its Mitigations
    저자 Reehorst, Andrew L.;; Addy, Harold E., Jr.;; Colantonio, Renato O.
    Keyword AIRCRAFT CONTROL;; AIRCRAFT ICING;; AIRCRAFT SAFETY;; FLIGHT CREWS;; FLIGHT HAZARDS;; LOSSES;; STATISTICAL ANALYSIS;; TAKEOFF
    URL http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20100042407
    보고서번호 NASA/TM-2010-216912
    발행년도 2010
    출처 NTRS (NASA Technical Report Server)
    ABSTRACT Factors external to the aircraft are often a significant causal factor in loss of control (LOC) accidents. In today s aviation world, very few accidents stem from a single cause and typically have a number of causal factors that culminate in a LOC accident. Very often the "trigger" that initiates an accident sequence is an external environment factor. In a recent NASA statistical analysis of LOC accidents, aircraft icing was shown to be the most common external environmental LOC causal factor for scheduled operations. When investigating LOC accident or incidents aircraft icing causal factors can be categorized into groups of 1) in-flight encounter with super-cooled liquid water clouds, 2) take-off with ice contamination, or 3) in-flight encounter with high concentrations of ice crystals. As with other flight hazards, icing induced LOC accidents can be prevented through avoidance, detection, and recovery mitigations. For icing hazards, avoidance can take the form of avoiding flight into icing conditions or avoiding the hazard of icing by making the aircraft tolerant to icing conditions. Icing detection mitigations can take the form of detecting icing conditions or detecting early performance degradation caused by icing. Recovery from icing induced LOC requires flight crew or automated systems capable of accounting for reduced aircraft performance and degraded control authority during the recovery maneuvers. In this report we review the icing induced LOC accident mitigations defined in a recent LOC study and for each mitigation describe a research topic required to enable or strengthen the mitigation. Many of these research topics are already included in ongoing or planned NASA icing research activities or are being addressed by members of the icing research community. These research activities are described and the status of the ongoing or planned research to address the technology needs is discussed.

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