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Integrated neural flight and propulsion control system
Author(s) -
Karen Gundy-Burlet,
John Kaneshige
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation, and control conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2001-4386
Subject(s) - propulsion , computer science , control (management) , aeronautics , control system , artificial neural network , aerospace engineering , control engineering , engineering , artificial intelligence , electrical engineering
This paper describes an integrated neural flight and propulsion control system, which uses a neural network based approach for applying alternate sources of control power in the presence of damage or failures. Under normal operating conditions, the system utilizes conventional flight control surfaces. Neural networks are used to provide consistent handling qualities across flight conditions and for different aircraft configurations. Under damage or failure conditions, the system may utilize unconventional flight control surface allocations, along with integrated propulsion control, when additional control power is necessary for achieving desired flight control performance. In this case, neural networks are used to adapt to changes in aircraft dynamics and control allocation schemes. Of significant importance here is the fact that this system can operate without emergency or backup flight control mode operations. An additional advantage is that this system can utilize, but does not require, fault detection and isolation information or explicit parameter identification. Piloted simulation studies were performed on a commercial transport aircraft simulator. Subjects included both NASA test pilots and commercial airline crews. Results demonstrate the potential for improving handing qualities and significantly increasing survivability rates under various simulated failure conditions.

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