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Satellites Could Show Airplanes Faster Long-Haul Routes in Mid-Air (qz.com)

The promise of powerful satellite constellations orbiting hundreds of miles above the earth can seem, well, a little distant. But what if they could make long-haul flights faster? From a report: Operators like Iridium and Inmarsat are promising that jet liners linked to space communications networks can save fliers money, time and carbon impact, as more efficient flights cut fuel use. Today, an airliner flying five miles over the open ocean, beyond the reach of the radar systems used by civil air controllers, is dependent on flight plans written well before take-off, and what pilots could report over the radio to scattered air traffic controllers. Weather bulletins still arrive in the cockpit as brief text messages. But a true global communications network -- one orbit around the earth -- could give pilots the flexibility to react to changing situations in real time, the same way Google Maps now allows drivers to re-route around traffic jams as they drive.

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  1. Re:It's not like they don't plan now, do they? by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is the idea that flight routes aren't already optimally planned? That existing weather systems that might impact a specific flight aren't built into the flight plan, with fine adjustments made by pilots to alter course based on actual flight path conditions?

    The summary makes it sound like planes aren't already flying the shortest possible path already. I mean, airspace over the open ocean is pretty goddamn empty, it's not like they're trying to avoid a jam-up on the 405.

    Flights over the Atlantic are coordinated between Canada and the UK. There is a set of 10 "routes" each way and the air traffic agency responsible (Canada for east to west, UK for west to east) sets up the routes (which vary daily) and the scheduling of aircraft on the routes.

    This is done so while aircraft are over the middle of the Atlantic where there is no radar coverage, they won't encounter traffic - either because they're running into slower traffic ahead, traffic going the other way, or traffic beside them.

    It's not the most efficient, but it's the safest route - and very little deviation is allowed.

    And yes, there are traffic jams, which is why there are 10 different "lanes" going both ways.

    The thing is, ADS-B (yes, ADS-B) is being implemented worldwide. Unlike the US system though, most countries are going with a space-based satellite system, so your ADS-B transponder will talk to the satellites. (The US went with ground based systems because there is so much airplane traffic that it would overload the satellites). With this it means the location of all aircraft will be known, so it will be possible to control aircraft beyond radar coverage (just because they are beyond radar coverage doesn't mean they are beyond radio range - satellite messaging and HF radio allow all aircraft to still be in communication).