Exploring the Use of Geographic Information Systems to Identify Spatial Patterns of Remote UAS Pilots and Possible National Airspace Risk
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Problem Statement
2. Background
- In the U.S., the State of California had the most sightings,
- Out of 1346 reported sightings,
- o
- 1009 were above the legal limit of 400 feet,
- o
- 491 were within five miles of an airport,
- o
- 73 were within 250 feet of manned aircraft,
- o
- 27 were at the same altitude as the manned aircraft,
- o
- 260 were within Class B and C airspace,
- o
- 25 required manned aircraft to take evasive action to avoid a collision.
3. Methods
3.1. Data Sources
3.2. Geocoding Methods
3.3. Airmen Geospatial Analysis
4. Results
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Pilot Certificate | Description | Total Population |
---|---|---|
Student | Designed for the initial training period of flying. Must have a flight instructor present. May fly solo after instructor endorsement. | 252,452 |
Recreational | Limited to certain aircraft, number of passengers, distance, and types of airports. | 79 |
Sport | Limited to light-sport aircraft. | 6837 |
Private | May carry passengers and provides for limited business use of an airplane. | 168,971 |
Commercial | May conduct some operations for compensation and hire. | 108,083 |
Airline Transport | Required to fly as captain by some air transport operations. | 164,112 |
Remote Pilot | May operate a UAS under the FAA’s Small UAS Rule (Part 107). | 307,049 |
Layer Name | Layer Description |
---|---|
FAA Registered Airmen | Geocoded point location at the address level of all records within the airmen database |
Registered Remote Pilots | Geocoded point location for all records with a certification type of ‘U’ |
Registered Commercial Pilots | Geocoded point location for all records with a certification type of ‘P’ and certification level of ‘C’ |
Registered Manned Pilots | Geocoded point location for all records with a certification type of ‘P’ and excluding those with a certification level of ‘S’ |
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Lercel, D.J.; Hupy, J.P. Exploring the Use of Geographic Information Systems to Identify Spatial Patterns of Remote UAS Pilots and Possible National Airspace Risk. Safety 2023, 9, 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety9010018
Lercel DJ, Hupy JP. Exploring the Use of Geographic Information Systems to Identify Spatial Patterns of Remote UAS Pilots and Possible National Airspace Risk. Safety. 2023; 9(1):18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety9010018
Chicago/Turabian StyleLercel, Damon J., and Joseph P. Hupy. 2023. "Exploring the Use of Geographic Information Systems to Identify Spatial Patterns of Remote UAS Pilots and Possible National Airspace Risk" Safety 9, no. 1: 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety9010018
APA StyleLercel, D. J., & Hupy, J. P. (2023). Exploring the Use of Geographic Information Systems to Identify Spatial Patterns of Remote UAS Pilots and Possible National Airspace Risk. Safety, 9(1), 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety9010018