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'Soft walls' will keep hijacked planes at bay
New Scientist ^ | 7/2/03 | Anil Ananthaswamy

Posted on 07/02/2003 6:25:12 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Surrounding city centres and likely terrorist targets with "soft walls" will make it impossible for hijacked planes to get anywhere near them. So say the inventors of an avionics system that creates no-fly zones that pilots cannot breach.

Since the terrorist attacks on 11 September 2001, anti-aircraft missile batteries have been installed to protect buildings in Washington DC and other US cities.

Less drastic solutions have also been suggested. Aerospace company Northrop Grumman, for instance, has proposed installing the electronics from its Global Hawk pilotless plane in passenger aircraft to allow ground control to take over a hijacked plane and land it remotely. Others say automatic landing systems could steer planes to safety without human intervention.


Stopping the hijackers

All these solutions have disadvantages, says Edward Lee at the University of California in Berkeley. They require radio links between the plane and air traffic control, and these can be jammed, or hacked into. They could even allow planes to be hijacked from the ground if terrorists managed to take over air-traffic control sites.

Lee and his colleagues have an alternative. They propose modifying the avionics in aircraft so that the plane would fight any efforts by the pilot to fly into restricted airspace. So if a plane was flying with a no-fly-zone to the left, and the pilot started banking left to enter the zone, the avionics would counter by banking right. Lee's system, called "soft walls", would first gently resist the pilot, and then become increasingly forceful until it prevailed.

Immune to hacking

To the pilot, it would feel like fighting an external force, such as a strong wind. "When you reach a certain critical point, the pilot is banking as hard to the left as the aircraft will go - as far as he can tell - and that is only just cancelling the force, so the aircraft is still going straight," says Lee.

The system would include an on-board database of the GPS coordinates of the no-fly zones. If it sensed an attempt to jam GPS signals it would switch to other navigation aids such as airport beacons. Being independent of ground control means soft walls would be immune to hacking.

For modern fly-by-wire aircraft, installing soft walls would only require software changes. Lee's team has developed algorithms to control the aircraft and carried out some testing. "But no pure software simulation is going to be sufficient to convince any pilot," says Lee.

To take it to the next level, Lee is collaborating with aircraft manufacturer Boeing. Don Winter, director of R&D at Boeing's Phantom Works research division in St Louis, Missouri, says Boeing has asked the Pentagon for more research funding for soft walls.

"We'd like to take the technology investigation to the next stage, which is evaluation of the algorithms in high-fidelity simulators," he says.

He has yet to convince the people who fly the planes. "In general, pilots are openly hostile," he says. "Frankly it surprises me, because of all of the options that they are facing right now - including being shot at or commandeered from the ground - this is their best one."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: anilananthaswamy; cities; exclusion; gps; hijack; planes; walls; zones
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1 posted on 07/02/2003 6:25:13 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker
duhh - what hapens when they cut power to this system?

Dumb- dumber - come on guys think!

What a waste of money.
2 posted on 07/02/2003 6:28:50 PM PDT by paulk
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To: paulk
I don't know. Presumably hijackers will not be able to disable the system from inside the plane.
3 posted on 07/02/2003 6:31:36 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker
Won't work on the Airbus. The pilot will try to turn left, and the plane will try to turn right. Then the tail falls off.
4 posted on 07/02/2003 6:34:16 PM PDT by exit82 (Constitution?--I got your Constitution right here!--T. Daschle)
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To: LibWhacker
I hope this technology can be refined down to a personal level. It sounds like a perfect way to keep an ex-GF or two away.
5 posted on 07/02/2003 6:35:10 PM PDT by ALASKA
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To: LibWhacker
I think it's great. The article says the buildings have batteries so you don't need power. Bagdad didn't have any power when these planes were used so they must have used something.
6 posted on 07/02/2003 6:35:55 PM PDT by freekitty
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To: exit82
Interesting point.
7 posted on 07/02/2003 6:36:51 PM PDT by freekitty
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To: paulk
what hapens when they cut power to this system?

Because it controls flight surfaces, it is redundant again, according to good design and ATA regs. If they pop all three breakers (I'm not sure you can do that without the AC fighting back), the fly-by-wire wires don't fly. It wouldn't work on anything but FBW AC.

/john

8 posted on 07/02/2003 6:41:30 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (I'm just a cook.)
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To: exit82
Won't work on the Airbus. The pilot will try to turn left, and the plane will try to turn right.

IOW the Scarebus will perform just as it does today ;)

9 posted on 07/02/2003 7:19:03 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Everyone knows you can't have a successful conspiracy without a Rockefeller)
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To: JRandomFreeper
And what happens when the system malfunctions?
10 posted on 07/02/2003 7:20:18 PM PDT by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
when the system malfunctions?

Which one? The one on the "A" bus, the one on the "B" bus, or the one that is switchable between "A", "B", or "Batt"

/john

11 posted on 07/02/2003 7:22:49 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (I'm just a cook.)
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To: JRandomFreeper
Even if this system was perfected, what would keep a terrorist from landing on a terminal at the airport? Timed right the terrorist could take out 10,000 people and a dozen 747's loaded with fuel. Or the terrorist could fly into a cruise ship, which being movable would not be in the GPS data base.

It's a lot more fool-proof to have the pilots armed with guns.

12 posted on 07/02/2003 7:41:54 PM PDT by Reeses
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To: JRandomFreeper
Not to be melodramatic, but the Titanic was supposed to have been unsinkable. "Foolproof systems" with no human override make me nervous. And of course if there is a human override, it defeats the purpose.

It's an interesting idea, but Murphy's law hasn't been repealed. Such system on planes could cause accidents just by the virtue of their existence, someone made a software glitch in the program, which only causes a problem in some 1 in a million situation, and bingo, that situation happens.

I vaguely remember that NASA lost some unmanned drones, which go through plenty of design reviews and tests, on account of some software glitch due to some simple conversion issue that nobody noticed. Well, think of hundreds of people on an airplane when a glitch occurs.
13 posted on 07/02/2003 7:42:12 PM PDT by FairOpinion
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To: Reeses
It's a lot more fool-proof to have the pilots armed with guns.

Amen! And the rest of the crew. And the passengers.

I would support legislation to limit what rounds could be carried....

And to answer your question, nothing. But when I started, I was answering a very specific question. ;>)

/john

14 posted on 07/02/2003 7:48:11 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (I'm just a cook.)
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To: FairOpinion
Foolproof systems" with no human override make me nervous.

Me too. I was answering a very specific question. I'm also watching the History Channel which is playing "Engineering Disasters" I like Reeses answer better than any of the techno answers.

/john

15 posted on 07/02/2003 7:51:06 PM PDT by JRandomFreeper (I'm just a cook.)
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To: Reeses
It's a lot more fool-proof to have the pilots armed with guns.

I agree, but the media and the "Progressive Left" have made Americans so afraid of guns that they would rather rely on a complex system for their security. This system is nothing more than an electronic "Maginot Line" and is merely a challenge for a terrorist, not a deterrent. When will they ever learn.

16 posted on 07/02/2003 7:51:21 PM PDT by elbucko
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To: LibWhacker
A very elaborate and expensive system like this will only introduce new dangers.
17 posted on 07/02/2003 8:01:49 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: LibWhacker
How about an Evelyn Waugh defense system, in which we hire interior decorators from the demimonde to go exterior and layer all major metro areas in steel and foam rubber? It would be about as practical.
18 posted on 07/02/2003 8:05:30 PM PDT by AmericanVictory (Should we be more like them, or they like us?)
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To: LibWhacker
Heard an expert on Fox talk about an easier, even more chilling attck plan the FBI has been looking at.

Terrorists infiltrating (rather easily) airport runways during peak traffic hours and setting off small, multiple bombs on fully-gassed airliners as they load/unload on the runway. The results at some of the crowded airports in the US and Europe would be catastrophic.

Requirements to do this would be minimal in terms of explosives, planning, cost and people.
19 posted on 07/02/2003 8:28:50 PM PDT by txzman (Jer 23:29)
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To: LibWhacker
This is all well and good, but it ignores the potential victims in the plane itself.

Arming the pilots and placing law enforcement aboard would be much more efficient and cost effective...

20 posted on 07/02/2003 8:33:00 PM PDT by yooper
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