Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Airline disruption management: yesterday, today and tomorrow

Francisco Jesus Jimenez Serrano    
Antonin Kazda    

Resumen

Adverse weather conditions, strikes, political reasons and other different causes can impact the long-term success of an airline. An effective Disruption Management System can predict the occurrence of these events and assist by reducing the impact on the operations. The paper offers an overview on what is considered a disruption for airlines and analyses the state-of-the-practice of airline operation control centers. Traditionally, Operations Control Centers (OCCs) are mainly composed by aircraft dispatchers, maintenance operators, and other operational personnel. Currently, there is a tendency to integrate into this control centers other departments critical for the decision making, such as commercial department, social media, ground operations, etc. However, we propose an analysis of what other data is required to provide fact-based decisions during Irregular Operations (IROPS). The need for implementing these decisions, requires a promptly access to real time data by frontline and operational staff. The paper also offers an understanding of this required data. Furthermore, one of the indicator to measure the long-term success of an airline is the number of passenger flown by year and their engagement to continue flying with the airline in the future. This aspect is not always considered during disruption, therefore decisions are taken based on previous operational experience without considering real long-term impact on value of passengers. The paper explores some of the solutions to personalize passenger preferences in case of disruptions. Specifically, we look into self-serve options to provide the passenger with the sense of control of the situation. Lastly, the complexity of Disruption Management in airlines is motivated by the lack of resources (aircraft, crew, etc.) and limited transportation options. An assessment is conducted on the Meta-CDM project which incorporates rails and buses as an alternate mode of transportation.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Veenu Tripathi and Stefano Caizzone    
Accurate navigation is a crucial asset for safe aviation operation. The GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) is set to play an always more important role in aviation but needs to cope with the risk of interference, possibly causing signal disruption... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
R. J. Roosien, M. N. A. Lim, S. M. Petermeijer and W. F. Lammen    
To reduce the carbon footprint of transport, policymakers are simultaneously stimulating cleaner vehicles and more sustainable mobility choices, such as a shift to rail for short-haul flights within Europe. The purpose of this study is to determine the c... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Huile Zhang, Zeyu Sun, Pengpeng Zhi, Wei Wang and Zhonglai Wang    
This paper develops a material-structure integrated design and optimization method based on a multiscale approach for the lightweight design of CFRP car doors. Initially, parametric modeling of RVE is implemented, and their elastic performance parameters... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Jingyi Hu, Junfeng Guo, Zhiyuan Rui and Zhiming Wang    
To solve the problem that noise seriously affects the online monitoring of parts signals of outdoor machinery, this paper proposes a signal reconstruction method integrating deep neural network and compression sensing, called ADMM-1DNet, and gives a deta... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Nora M. Albqmi and Sivasankaran Sivanandam    
The principal objective of the study is to examine the impact of thermal radiation and entropy generation on the magnetohydrodynamic hybrid nano-fluid, Al2O3/H2O, flow in a Darcy?Forchheimer porous medium with variable heat flux when subjected to an elec... ver más
Revista: Computation