NASA Tests Synthetic Vision

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • NASA evaluated an advanced multi-layered synthetic vision system using a Gulfstream GV as the test platform.
  • The system builds upon existing synthetic vision technology by adding features like a virtual bird's-eye view and voice recognition.
  • Key safety enhancements include a database integrity monitoring system that compares generated images to the real world, and a runway incursion prevention system.
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Multi-Layered System Evaluated…

NASA has announced it has run some tests on a synthetic vision system that appears to add a few wrinkles to the certified system already available from Chelton and the numerous experimental systems on the market. Using a Gulfstream GV as a test platform (a rigorous test environment if ever there was one) NASA and a bevy of private-sector and government partners put the system through its paces. Like existing systems, the NASA gear gives the pilot a computer-generated portrayal of the world outside based on GPS mated to a topographical database, but it goes a few steps beyond. The system also gives a virtual bird’s-eye view of the world below, and incorporates a voice recognition system and a database integrity monitoring system that uses sensors to “compare the real world to the pictures being generated.” Finally, a runway incursion prevention system was added to alert the crew to any developing problems on the ground. The system was tested in both panel-mounted and head-up mode.

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