The rapidly decreasing cost and availability of color flat panel displays has sparked their use in a variety of applications. Among these is the increasing presence of such displays in the cockpits of aircraft, including commercial aircraft, to display graphically simulated flight instruments that have traditionally been implemented by standalone mechanical devices. Through integration of the various functions of multiple primary flight instruments on a single flat panel display, a pilot can by viewing a single display panel monitor the most essential instrument indications needed to safely operate the aircraft.
On larger flat panels, more and more information can be included on a single display. It is also no longer uncommon to find multiple flat panels, each displaying different types of information from a variety of sources, disposed before a single pilot in an aircraft cockpit. In addition to graphical simulations of the aircraft's primary flight instruments and data representing numerous operating parameters of the aircraft, representations of real-time video images from the passenger cabin and other locations about the aircraft, weather radar and related information, GPS-derived position data, and electronically-stored navigation charts and approach plates can be presented on multi-function and/or separate flat panel displays which are located in the cockpit for ease of viewing by a pilot operating the aircraft.
The provision of GPS-based moving map displays in an aircraft cockpit is by now common in all but the oldest of aircraft. In such displays, a selectively-detailed map of an adjustably-sized region in which the aircraft is currently located is imaged on the display. In the center of the display, a small fixed or static crosshair or “t” or like representation of an aircraft denotes the current position of the aircraft within the mapped “chunk” or geographic area which is imaged on the display. When the aircraft is moving—as in flight—the portion of the map shown on the display is dynamically adjusted so that the fixed, static aircraft representation always denotes the current location of the aircraft relative to the map. Thus, the position of the aircraft representation on the display itself is fixed—typically proximate the center of the displayed map or map portion—and the map is moved to indicate the current aircraft location. The aircraft representation, as noted above, is most commonly implemented as a simple, fixed set of intersecting lines of the like.
Pilots also make extensive use of paper-based flight charts to plan and execute flights. Such charts—including enroute charts depicting, for example, low and high altitude airways, approach plates, and airport diagrams—are also now available in digitized or electronic form, and are increasingly being presented for viewing in aircraft cockpits on flat panel displays, including those mounted in the aircraft cockpit. The display of such flight charts—such, for example, as Jeppesen charts, which are widely used in both commercial and general aviation—on a cockpit-mounted flat panel display enables the pilot to readily view those charts without having to divert his or her attention to a hand-held paper chart and thereby away from the cockpit location of the various instruments and displays upon which the information and data necessary for operating the aircraft is presented. This both enhances safety in aircraft operation and decreases pilot workload.
The present invention provides functionality that further supplements the advantages of electronic display of flight chart-based information. Broadly, the invention provides for an enhanced representation of current aircraft flight position on a graphically-imaged electronic flight chart. More particularly, general GPS functionality is associated with the electronic display of chart-based information and, in addition, supplemental information on and parameters of the aircraft, its movement and its relation to the charted data is presented by way of active symbology which is utilized to represent the aircraft.
The presently preferred embodiments of the invention are discussed with reference to the appended drawings in which:
In accordance with a first aspect of the invention, a representation of the aircraft is superposed or otherwise provided on or with the graphical image of the chart shown on the flat panel, preferably color flat panel, display. That is, a representation of the aircraft is presented on the display at that position of the chart-shown data which corresponds to the current location of the aircraft within the displayed chart. The location of the aircraft symbol, relative to the flat panel or frame or window in which chart or chart portion is depicted, may be fixed in the manner of a conventional GPS moving map display—as for example where the displayed chart is a relevant portion of an enroute chart—or the aircraft symbol location may dynamically move about the flat panel or frame or window relative to a fixed or static chart—as for example where the displayed chart is an approach plate, such as that shown in
The use of a static crosshair or other invariable representation of the aircraft on, for example, an enroute chart carries with it a serious drawback that is well known with conventional aircraft GPS receiver displays. There is a tendency for a pilot to devote too much attention to such displays, thus operating the aircraft without sufficient attention to the other data—including the primary flight instruments—that must be utilized to safely operate the aircraft. The present invention enhances the safe operation of the aircraft by additionally providing, in an active symbology representing the aircraft, supplemental information and aircraft parameters that enhance the pilot's situational awareness during the time that attention is focused on or directed to the flat panel on which the chart is displayed.
As noted above, the symbology for representing the aircraft in superposed relation to the graphically-imaged chart is active—i.e. it dynamically changes, at least in part, to reflect changing aircraft operating parameters (in addition to aircraft location relative to the imaged chart) that it depicts. Moreover, the overall size of the symbology may and, as presently contemplated, will vary as a function of the size and/or type of the particular chart on which it is superposed, based on flight or environmental conditions necessitating more or less pilot attention thereto, optionally under the control of the flight crew, and/or as a matter of design choice. In general, and subject however to other applicable considerations, the displayed symbology will be sized appropriate to the particular chart or chart portion on which it is superposed; in
In a currently preferred form, the symbology comprises 4 distinct elements, as shown in by way of preferred illustration in
The second element of the preferred symbology is a crosshair, which is shown in red in
The third element of the preferred symbology is an indicator of the current track or course of the aircraft. In the preferred embodiment shown in
The fourth element of the preferred symbology is a semi-transparent or translucent circular background—shown in blue in
It is not anticipated that any specialized hardware will be required to implement the invention. In general, the functionality herein described may be implemented in software on a general purpose processor, although of course dedicated or specialized hardware may be utilized as a matter of design choice. All of the data necessary to provide the indications represented by the various elements of the symbology is already available on an aircraft, and the representations forming the active symbology as herein described can be provided by conventional graphics processors or generators as are well known in the art.
Thus, while there have shown and described and pointed out fundamental novel features of the invention as applied to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that various omissions and substitutions and changes in the form and details of the methods described and devices illustrated, and in their operation, may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, it is expressly intended that all combinations of those elements and/or method steps which perform substantially the same function in substantially the same way to achieve the same results are within the scope of the invention. Moreover, it should be recognized that structures and/or elements and/or method steps shown and/or described in connection with any disclosed form or embodiment of the invention may be incorporated in any other disclosed or described or suggested form or embodiment as a general matter of design choice.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60810619 | Jun 2006 | US |