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Your next pilot could be drone software

Your next pilot could be drone software
Credit: Yasir Gürbüz from Pexels

Would you get on a plane that didn't have a human pilot in the cockpit? surveyed in 2017 said they would not, even if the ticket was cheaper. Modern pilots do such a good job that almost any air accident is big news, such as the on April 17.

But stories of , , and , however rare, are reminders that pilots are only human. Not every can be flown by a disaster-averting , like Southwest or . But software could change that, equipping every plane with an extremely experienced guidance system that is always learning more.

In fact, on many flights, autopilot systems already control the plane for . And software handles – when there is no visibility and the pilot can't see anything to even know where he or she is. But human pilots are still on hand as backups.

A new generation of software pilots, developed for self-flying vehicles, or drones, will soon have logged more flying hours than all humans have – ever. By combining their enormous amounts of flight data and experience, drone-control software applications are poised to quickly become the world's most experienced pilots.

Drones that fly themselves

Drones come in many forms, from to , or even that can stay aloft for 34 hours at a stretch.

When drones were , they were by human operators. However, this merely substitutes a pilot on the ground for one aloft. And it between the drone and control center, to carry real-time video from the drone and to transmit the operator's commands.

Many newer drones no longer need pilots; some drones for can now along , leaving the human free to sightsee – or control the camera to get the best view.

, and are now testing larger and more capable drones that will operate autonomously. can fly without needing tens or hundreds of humans to control them. And they can perform that human controllers could never handle.

Whether flying in swarms or alone, the software that controls these drones is rapidly gaining flight experience.

Could humans control these 1,218 drones all together?

Importance of pilot experience

Experience is the main qualification for pilots. Even a person who wants to fly a small plane for personal and noncommercial use needs of flying instruction before getting a private pilot's license. Commercial airline pilots must have before even serving as a co-pilot.

On-the-ground training and in-flight experience prepare pilots for unusual and emergency scenarios, ideally to help save lives in situations like the "." But many pilots are less experienced than "Sully" Sullenberger, who saved his planeload of people with quick and creative thinking. With software, though, every plane can have on board a pilot with as much experience – if not more. A popular software pilot system, in use in many aircraft at once, could gain more flight time each day than a single human might .

As someone who studies as well as the use of artificial intelligence for , , and other uses, I don't lightly suggest handing over the controls for those additional tasks. But giving software pilots more control would maximize computers' advantages over humans in training, testing and reliability.

Training and testing software pilots

Unlike people, computers will follow sets of instructions in software the same way every time. That lets developers create instructions, test reactions and refine aircraft responses. Testing could make it far less likely, for example, that a computer would and throw the plane into a steep dive to avoid it.

The most significant advantage is scale: Rather than teaching thousands of individual pilots new skills, updating thousands of aircraft would require only downloading updated software.

These systems would also need to be thoroughly tested – in both real-life situations and in – to handle a wide range of aviation situations and to withstand cyberattacks. But once they're working well, software pilots are not susceptible to distraction, disorientation, fatigue or other human impairments that can create problems or cause errors even in common situations.

Rapid response and adaptation

Already, aircraft regulators are concerned that human pilots are on their own and may have trouble taking over from an autopilot in an emergency.

Your next pilot could be drone software

In the "" event, for example, a key factor in what happened was – that the plane had flown through a flock of birds, which had damaged both engines – and how to respond. Rather than the it took the humans, a computer could have assessed the situation in seconds, potentially saving enough time that the plane could have landed on a runway instead of a river.

Aircraft damage can pose another particularly difficult challenge for human pilots: It can change what effects the controls have on its flight. In cases where damage , the result is often tragedy. A sufficiently advanced automated system could make minute changes to the aircraft's steering and use its sensors to quickly evaluate the effects of those movements – essentially learning how to fly all over again with a damaged plane.

Boosting public confidence

The biggest barrier to fully automated flight is psychological, not technical. Many people may not want to trust their lives to computer systems. But they might come around when reassured that the software pilot has tens, hundreds or thousands more hours of flight experience than any human pilot.

Other autonomous technologies, too, are progressing despite public concerns. Regulators and lawmakers are in many states. But more than half of Americans don't want to ride in one, largely because they . And only around the world are willing to board a plane without a pilot. However, as more people experience self-driving cars on the road and have , it is likely that software pilots will gain in acceptance.

The airline industry will certainly be pushing people to trust the new systems: Automating pilots could a year. And the current means software pilots may be the key to having any airline service to smaller destinations.

Both and have made significant investments in automated flight technology, which would remove or reduce the need for human pilots. Boeing has actually bought a manufacturer and is to the next generation of its passenger aircraft. (Other tests have tried to retrofit existing aircraft with robotic pilots.)

One way to help regular passengers become comfortable with software pilots – while also helping to both train and test the systems – could be to introduce them as co-pilots working alongside human pilots. Planes would be operated by from gate to gate, with the pilots instructed to touch the controls only if the system fails. Eventually pilots could be removed from the aircraft altogether, just like they eventually were from the that we routinely ride in airports around the world.

Provided by The Conversation

This article was originally published on . Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Your next pilot could be drone software (2018, April 19) retrieved 9 May 2025 from /news/2018-04-drone-software.html
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