DEFINITION:
The flight control system of an aircraft enables the pilot to control the aircraft along a desired trajectory and overcome the aerodynamic forces acting on the control surfaces. It improves the stability and flying qualities of an aircraft to a desired level. Current civil transport aircraft and military fighter aircraft are equipped with electronic fly-by-wire flight control systems providing easy, safe and economic operation of the vehicle under all operating conditions. Research on flight control systems uses analytical and experimental techniques to design a system to control the aircraft and subsequently analyse the stability of the closed-loop system, i.e. the aircraft with the pilot (or autopilot) in the loop.
(Source: ACARE Domain 502)
SUBDOMAINS:
- System Identification (see 501)
- Mathematical modelling (see 501, adding sensors and FSC systems models)
- Definition of controller requirements and desired handling criteria
- Controller design – control theory (architecture, algorithms, robustness)
- Thrust vectoring and integrated flight- and propulsion control
- Analytical controller analysis (stability and robustness, using linear models)
- Controller analysis using desktop simulation
- Controller analysis using a flight simulator (pilot-in-the-loop, handling qualities)
- Flight test analysis (see 501, including handling qualities)
- Development of a more efficient, integrated design and analysis process for robust controllers
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