Blog entry by Bruce McPherson

Anyone in the world

In 2015, NASA began research on technology, performance requirements, and procedures to enable civil UAS operations in low altitude airspace. A Research Transition Team (RTT) was established to coordinate the NASA and FAA efforts for exploring a new paradigm in air traffic management that will integrate the anticipated new volume of small UAS operations into the NAS without overtaxing the current ATM system.

NASA’s research concept specifically addressed small UAS Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) operations below 400 feet in airspace that contains low-density manned aircraft operations. NASA developed a phased approach for its UTM development and testing, building from rural to urban environments and from low- to high-density airspaces. This progression of Technical Capability Levels (TCL) brought in industry partners to assure the concept would enable their business cases and spur innovative solutions. The TCLs ranged from low risk Visual Line of Sight (VLOS) operations to complex operations in high density urban environments (visual representation available here). 

The testing culminated in demonstrations in downtown Reno, NV, and Corpus Cristi, TX, in 2019. Results from the TCLs have been published and technology transfers to the FAA of the UTM system concept, designs, and software concluded in 2020. The UTM demonstrations showed that a highly automated, federated, service-based architecture is feasible for safely managing future small UAS traffic demands. The UTM concept has been further tested by the FAA with NASA collaboration in the UTM Pilot Program Phases 1 and 2. 

The UTM concept became a starting point for researching traffic management for other vehicle types and airspace domains such as Urban Air Mobility (UAM) and High Class E airspace under either BVLOS or VLOS conditions. Whereas the UTM project is sunsetting in mid-2021, NASA will continue to coordinate with the FAA and UAS community to advance the UAS Traffic Management ecosystem. 

Want to learn more? Visit: NASA UTM: Home


Event Details:

A one-day Technical Interchange Meeting (TIM) is being held to provide an opportunity to share insights into the research conducted, lessons learned, and next steps toward the future of UTM. Please see the meeting details below. 

  • Date: Tuesday, February 23, 2021
  • Time: 10:00AM – 7:30PM ET (7:00AM – 4:30PM PT)
  • Agenda: Coming Soon
  • Video Collaboration Platform: YouTube Live Stream
  • Q&A Platform: Conferences.io

On Tuesday (2/23), simply return to this webpage for the YouTube Live Stream link. It will be linked above where it says “YouTube Live Stream” 15 minutes prior to the start of the event (9:45AM ET / 6:45AM PT). 

For Q&A, we will be utilizing conferences.io. You will enter your questions into the conferences.io platform and the speakers will respond one of two ways: 

  1. Share the question and answer verbally with everyone through the YouTube live stream; or
  2. Provide a written answer through conferences.io for everyone to reference throughout the event. 

To access conferences.io, enter https://arc.cnf.io/sessions/qw2n/#!/dashboard into your browser. 

We will not be taking verbal or written questions from the audience through Youtube. However, you will need to use the YouTube Live Stream link to see the presentation materials and hear the discussion. 

By PRESS