Nationwide Demand Modeling for an Urban Air Mobility Commuting Mission

被引:3
|
作者
Kotwicz Herniczek M.T. [1 ]
German B.J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, 30332, GA
来源
Journal of Air Transportation | 2024年 / 32卷 / 02期
基金
美国国家航空航天局;
关键词
Compendex;
D O I
10.2514/1.D0371
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In this paper, we present a comprehensive and reproducible urban air mobility (UAM) demand model centered around publicly available data and open source tools capable of demand estimation at the national level. A discrete mode-choice demand model is developed using longitudinal origin–destination employment statistics flow data, American community survey economic data, and the Open Source Routing Machine (OSRM) to identify the utility of a UAM commuter service relative to other modes of transportation. Using the implemented model, we identify New York City, San Francisco, and Los Angeles as cities with the highest potential commuter demand, and Seattle as the city most resilient to increases in delay time. A sensitivity study of demand is performed and shows that strong demand exists for short trips with low total delay times and for longer trips with a low ticket price per kilometer, with the former showing resilience to increases in operational costs and the latter showing resilience to increases in delays. The demand model is supported by a speed-flow model, which fuses highway performance monitoring system data with OpenStreetMap data to provide traffic-adjusted road segment speeds to OSRM. The speed-flow model has the capability of providing congestion data for road segments across the United States without the use of commercial data sets or routing services and is shown to improve routing duration accuracy in congested regions. © 2023 by Mark T. Kotwicz Herniczek and Brian J. German.
引用
收藏
页码:56 / 70
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Heuristic Approach for Arrival Management of Aircraft in On-Demand Urban Air Mobility
    Pradeep P.
    Wei P.
    Journal of Aerospace Information Systems, 2020, 2020 : 1 - 12
  • [22] Commuter demand estimation and feasibility assessment for Urban Air Mobility in Northern California
    Rimjha, Mihir
    Hotle, Susan
    Trani, Antonio
    Hinze, Nicolas
    Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice, 2021, 148 : 506 - 524
  • [23] SP surveys to estimate Airport Shuttle demand in an Urban Air Mobility context
    Brunelli, Matteo
    Ditta, Chiara Caterina
    Postorino, Maria Nadia
    TRANSPORT POLICY, 2023, 141 : 129 - 139
  • [25] Editorial: Air mobility is an operational mission
    Correll, John T.
    Air Force Magazine, 1998, 81 (03):
  • [26] Demand Capacity Balancing at Vertiports: A Pending Slot Technique to Accommodate On-Demand Urban Air Mobility Operations
    Kim, Hyewook
    Eun, Yeonju
    Jeon, Daekeun
    AIAA AVIATION FORUM AND ASCEND 2024, 2024,
  • [27] Vertiport location for eVTOL considering multidimensional demand of urban air mobility: An application in Beijing
    Jiang, Yu
    Li, Zhichao
    Wang, Yasha
    Xue, Qingwen
    TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2025, 192
  • [28] Scenario-Based Demand Assessment of Urban Air Mobility in the Greater Munich Area
    Fu M.
    Straubinger A.
    Schaumeier J.
    Journal of Air Transportation, 2022, 30 (04): : 125 - 136
  • [29] Urban air mobility master
    Hofacker, Cat
    Cohn, Pamela
    AEROSPACE AMERICA, 2021, 59 (02) : 10 - 15
  • [30] The urban air mobility problem
    Golden, Bruce
    Oden, Eric
    Raghavan, S.
    ANNALS OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 2023,