Michael Braukus Headquarters, Washington Sept. 5, 2001 (Phone: 202/358-1979) Kathy Barnstorff Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. (Phone: 757/864-9886) RELEASE: 01-177 FLYING NASA LABORATORY TAKES A SAFETY SYNTHETIC TOUR OF THE ROCKIES NASA researchers are testing a revolutionary cockpit technology that will help pilots avoid deadly accidents caused by poor visibility. A passenger jet, equipped with futuristic, three-dimensional computer displays, is flying over the Rocky Mountains not far from Vail, Colo. Engineers from NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., have loaded a computer database depicting Vail's mountainous terrain on board a NASA research aircraft known as ARIES or Airborne Research Integrated Experiments System. ARIES is a highly modified Boeing 757 passenger jet transformed into a "flying simulator." The ARIES aircraft is taking off from the Colorado Springs Airport and making a number of flights over the Eagle County Regional Airport in support of the NASA Aviation Safety Program's (AvSP) Synthetic Vision Systems project. The NASA AvSP is working with industry teams to create and refine Synthetic Vision, a revolutionary display system for cockpits that will offer pilots an electronic picture of what's outside their windows, no matter the weather or time of day. During three weeks of flights, pilots from NASA, Boeing, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and major airlines are testing various Synthetic Vision display concepts in a real- life, terrain-challenged environment. They are evaluating display sizes, fields of view and computer graphic options to help determine which configurations will be most effective in preventing accidents. The system includes visual cues that will give pilots precision navigation guidance and help them avoid obstacles. Limited visibility is one of the greatest factors in most fatal aircraft accidents, according to Michael Lewis, director of the NASA Aviation Safety Program, headquartered at Langley. "With Global Positioning Satellite signals, pilots now can know exactly where they are," said Lewis. "Add super-accurate terrain databases and graphical displays, and we can draw three-dimensional moving scenes that will show pilots exactly what's outside. The type of accidents that happen in poor visibility just don't happen when pilots can see the terrain hazards ahead." The NASA Aviation Safety Program envisions a system that will use new and existing technologies to incorporate data into displays in aircraft cockpits. The displays will show terrain, ground obstacles, air traffic, landing and approach patterns, runway surfaces and other relevant data to the flight crew. The NASA Aviation Safety Program is a partnership with the FAA, the Department of Defense, aircraft manufacturers, airlines and universities. This partnership supports a national goal of reducing the fatal aircraft accident rate by 80 percent in 10 years. Researchers at four NASA field installations are working with the FAA and industry to develop advanced, affordable technologies to make flying safer: Langley; NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.; NASA Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif.; and NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland. Because of advances made the last 40 years, commercial airliners are the safest of all major modes of transportation. But with an accident rate that has remained relatively constant in the last decade, and air traffic expected to go up significantly over the next 20 years, the U.S. government wants to prevent a projected rise in the number of aircraft accidents. More information on the NASA Aviation Safety Program is available on the Internet at: http://avsp.larc.nasa.gov -end-