NASA deal to ease FAA integration
CSC, Raytheon win a $150 million contract to integrate NASA's air traffic management products at the FAA
NASA awarded Computer Sciences Corp. and Raytheon Systems Co. a $150 million
contract to help integrate the agency's air traffic management products
at the Federal Aviation Administration.
The NASA Air Traffic Management System Development and Integration contract
(ATMSDI) will deepen NASA's commitment to finding ways to make the FAA's
air traffic management system safer and more efficient, said Robert Jacobsen,
chief of the Advanced Air Transportation Technologies Office at NASA's Ames
Research Center. Jacobsen spoke during the Air Traffic Control Association's
Air Traffic Management Safety and Efficiency Research and Development symposium
yesterday in Crystal City, Va.
NASA chose CSC Federal Sector and Raytheon from a total of five prime
bidders for the three-year contract.
Jacobsen's organization, which is part of the FAA/NASA Interagency Air
Traffic Management Integrated Product Team, is trying to advance the FAA's
Free Flight program into a mature system, he said. Free Flight is a concept
under which pilots supplied with information about air traffic, position
and weather conditions will have more discretion in planning routes within
predetermined areas.
Part of NASA's vision for Free Flight is called Distributed Air/Ground
Traffic Management, which will allow flight crews, air traffic service providers
and aeronautical operational control personnel to use information available
to pilots and controllers to choose routes and give them flexibility to
change routes.
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