Introduction | Designing Missions | The Mission Window | Initial Aircraft Setup | Phases of Flight | Procedures and Sites | 3D Mission Editing| Catalogs

Designing Missions

Aircraft Mission Modeler is built upon the concept of an aircraft's mission, as opposed to a mere point-to-point route. An aircraft using Aircraft Mission Modeler as its propagator can conduct a transit between two points that is more complex than a great arc, and furthermore, can carry out operations that are more complex than a transit between two points (e.g., holding in a pattern). The process of defining a mission in Aircraft Mission Modeler, therefore, encompasses much more than merely selecting route points; a mission includes the flight procedures and performance characteristics of the aircraft and describes not only where the aircraft goes, but how it goes there and what it does along the way.

Whether a mission is as simple as a transit between two points or as complex as a patrol mission in which the aircraft has been retasked to respond to a threat, the method for designing a mission is the same in principle. To define a mission, you must:

The Mission Window is the platform from which all of these functions can be accessed, and in which the summary of the mission's sequence is displayed.

Aircraft Models

In Aircraft Mission Modeler, a model is much more than the graphical representation of the aircraft. An aircraft model defines the physical characteristics of the aircraft and the modes of flight - performance models - that define how the aircraft flies in any given situation; the graphics model is just one component of the aircraft model.

Phases

Phases are the basic logical unit of a Mission, and serve as containers for the procedures that define the aircraft's actions. Performance models can be specified for each phase and will be used by the procedures executed within them, thus helping to structure the mission. For example, you may wish to define a mission that varies between fuel conservation and high performance maneuvering as the aircraft travels from safe airspace into threatened airspace; phases are the mission elements that you use to distinguish between these performance requirements.

Procedures

Procedures are the building blocks that comprise the aircraft's route. Each procedure is associated with a site. The site defines the location and the nature of the position at which the procedure takes place - a runway, waypoint, or VTOL point - and also determines what procedure types are available for selection. The procedure itself defines the maneuver that the aircraft will perform and what procedures can immediately follow it. A procedure is executed using the performance models specified for the phase that it is contained within.