Virtual Pilot Lands Qantas Jet
An anonymous reader writes "Australian airline Qantas has successfully tested an automated landing where both the pilot and the control tower didn't talk to each other. The plane was being piloted by a "Virtual Pilot" located in the control tower."
Airplanes have been able to land on auto pilot for years using the Instrument Landing System (ILS)!!
:-)
This is more about remote control of an air plane than automated landing. According to the article, digital commands were uploaded to the 747.
With all this technology already in place, it is certainly possible to develop systems to enable commercial air planes take off on auto-pilot too. But that will require huge costs in new infrastructure to be installed at airports similar to the ILS for landing. Real-time software testing costs will also be enormous. Maybe FedEx mighe be interested in funding this
Commercially, the autopilot is the preferred method because it can make the tiny imperceptible changes for maximum fuel efficiency, that a normal pilot wouldn't (they're unnecessary from a flight point of view).
When the autopilot fails, the normal pilot takes over.