Area control center - Biblioteka.sk

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Area control center
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This temporary flight restriction map from the Federal Aviation Administration shows the boundaries of the regions controlled by the area control centers within and adjoining the contiguous United States, as well as the FAA location identifier of each such center operated by the United States

In air traffic control, an area control center (ACC), also known as a center or en-route center, is a facility responsible for controlling aircraft flying in the airspace of a given flight information region (FIR) at high altitudes between airport approaches and departures. In the US, such a center is referred to as an air route traffic control center (ARTCC).

A center typically accepts traffic from — and ultimately passes traffic to — the control of a terminal control center or another center. Most centers are operated by the national governments of the countries in which they are located. The general operations of centers worldwide, and the boundaries of the airspace each center controls, are governed by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).

In some cases, the function of an area control center and a terminal control center are combined in a single facility. For example, NATS combines the London Terminal Control Centre (LTCC) and London Area Control Centre (LACC) in Swanwick, Hampshire.

FAA definition

Houston Air Route Traffic Control Center, United States

The United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) defines an ARTCC as:

facility established to provide air traffic control service to aircraft operating on IFR flight plans within controlled airspace, principally during the en-route phase of flight. When equipment capabilities and controller workload permit, certain advisory/assistance services may be provided to VFR aircraft.[1]

An ARTCC is the U.S. equivalent of an area control center (ACC). There are 22 ARTCCs located in nineteen states.[2]

Subdivision of airspace into sectors

The flight information region controlled by a center may be further administratively subdivided into areas comprising two to nine sectors. Each area is staffed by a set of controllers trained on all the sectors in that area.

Sectors use distinct radio frequencies for communication with aircraft. Each sector also has secure landline communications with adjacent sectors, approach controls, areas, ARTCCs, flight service centers, and military aviation control facilities. These landline communications are shared among all sectors that need them and are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Aircraft passing from one sector to another are handed off and requested to change frequencies to contact the next sector controller. Sector boundaries are specified by an aeronautical chart.

Center operations

Controllers at work at the Washington Air Route Traffic Control Center, United States

Air traffic controllers working within a center communicate via radio with pilots of instrument flight rules (IFR) aircraft passing through the center's airspace. A center's communication frequencies (typically in the very high frequency aviation bands, using amplitude modulation (AM) 118 MHz to 137 MHz, for overland control) are published in aeronautical charts and manuals, and are also announced to a pilot by the previous controller during a hand-off. Most VHF radio assignments also have a UHF (225 to 380 MHz) paired frequency used for military flights.

In addition to radios to communicate with aircraft, center controllers have access to communication links with other centers and TRACONs. In the United States, centers are electronically linked through the National Airspace System, which allows nationwide coordination of traffic flow to manage congestion. Centers in the United States also have electronic access to nationwide radar data.

Controllers use radar to monitor the progress of flights and instruct aircraft to perform course adjustments as needed to maintain separation from other aircraft. Aircraft with center contact can be readily distinguished by their transponders. Pilots may request altitude adjustments or course changes for reasons including avoidance of turbulence or adverse weather conditions.

Controllers can assign routing relative to location fixes derived from latitude and longitude, or from radionavigation beacons such as VORs.

Typically, centers have advance notice of a plane's arrival and intentions from its pre-filed flight plan.

Oceanic air traffic control

Map of approximately the Northern Hemisphere from Japan & New Guinea (left edge) to the middle of North Atlantic Ocean. The map shows yellow over the continental U.S. and Bahamas, Alaska (and much of the Bering Sea), and a yellow circle around Bermuda. Most of the Northern Pacific is colored blue along with a small section in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico, and the western half of the North Atlantic from roughly the latitude of Maine to the northern edge of the Leeward Islands (or Puerto Rico).
The FAA provides air traffic control services over U.S. territory and over international waters where it has been delegated such authority by the International Civil Aviation Organization. This map depicts overflight fee regions. The yellow regions are where the U.S. provides enroute ATC services (mostly over land territory). The blue regions are where the U.S. provides oceanic ATC services over international waters.

Some centers have ICAO-designated responsibility for airspace located over an ocean such as ZNY and ZOA, the majority of which is international airspace. Because substantial volumes of oceanic airspace lie beyond the range of ground-based radars, oceanic airspace controllers have to estimate the position of an airplane from pilot reports and computer models (procedural control), rather than observing the position directly (radar control, also known as positive control). Pilots flying over an ocean can determine their own positions accurately using the Global Positioning System or other means, and can supply periodic updates to a center.

A center's control service for an oceanic flight information region may be operationally distinct from its service for one over land, employing different communications frequencies, controllers, and a different ICAO code.

Pilots typically use high frequency radio instead of very high frequency radio to communicate with a center when flying over the ocean, because of HF's relatively greater propagation over long distances. Military aircraft, however, are typically equipped with ARC-231 SATCOMs that allow over-the-horizon communication.[3]

List of area control centers

Area control centers under Fukuoka Flight Information Region (FIR) of Japan

Area control centers (ACCs) control IFR air traffic in their flight information region (FIR).

The current list of FIRs and ACCs is maintained by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).[4] Note that the cited ICAO source gives the shapefile coordinates for each FIR, and also its page source gives a list of current ACCs in text form. The following is the alphabetic list of all ACCs and their FIRs as of October 2011:

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Area_control_center
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ICAO code Type FIR or ACC Oceanic or other subtype Country or territory
AGGG FIR Honiara ACC  Solomon Islands
ANAU FIR Nauru ACC  Nauru
AYPM FIR Port Moresby ACC  Papua New Guinea
BGGL FIR Nuuk ACC  Greenland ( Denmark)
BIRD FIR Reykjavík ACC  Iceland
CZEG FIR Edmonton ACC  Canada
CZQM FIR Moncton Southern ACC  Canada
CZQX FIR Gander Domestic ACC  Canada
CZUL FIR Montreal ACC  Canada
CZVR FIR Vancouver ACC  Canada
CZWG FIR Winnipeg ACC  Canada
CZYZ FIR Toronto ACC  Canada
DAAA FIR Alger ACC  Algeria
DGAC FIR Accra ACC  Ghana
DIII FIR Abidjan ACC  Ivory Coast
DNKK FIR Kano ACC  Nigeria
DRRR FIR Niamey ACC  Niger
DTTC FIR Tunis ACC  Tunisia
EZZZ FIR Eurocontrol Eurocontrol  Belgium
EBBU FIR Brussels ACC  Belgium/ Luxembourg
EDGG FIR Langen ACC  Germany
EDMM FIR Munich ACC  Germany
EDUU UIR Rhein ACC  Germany
EDVV UIR Hannover ACC  Germany
EDWW FIR Bremen ACC  Germany
EDYY UIR Maastricht ACC  Belgium/ Germany/ Netherlands
EETT FIR Tallinn ACC  Estonia
EFIN FIR Helsinki ACC  Finland
EGGX FIR Shanwick Oceanic OCA Oceanic  United Kingdom
EGPX FIR Scottish ACC  United Kingdom
EGQQ FIR Scottish ACC (Mil) Military  United Kingdom
EGTT FIR London ACC  United Kingdom
EHAA FIR Amsterdam ACC  Netherlands
EISN FIR Shannon ACC  Ireland
EKDK FIR Copenhagen ACC  Denmark
ENOB FIR Bodo Oceanic OCA Oceanic  Norway
ENOR FIR Polaris ACC  Norway
EPWW FIR Warszawa ACC  Poland
ESAA FIR Sweden ACC  Sweden
ESMM FIR Malmo ACC  Sweden
ESOS FIR Stockholm ACC  Sweden
EVRR FIR Riga ACC  Latvia
EYVL FIR Vilnius ACC  Lithuania
FABL FIR Bloemfontein ACC  South Africa
FACA FIR Cape Town ACC  South Africa
FACT FIR Cape Town ACC  South Africa
FADN FIR Durban ACC  South Africa
FAJO FIR Johannesburg Oceanic ACC Oceanic  South Africa
FAJX FIR Johannesburg ACC  South Africa
FAPX FIR Port Elizabeth ACC  South Africa
FBGR FIR Gaborone ACC  Botswana
FCCC FIR Brazzaville ACC  Congo, Republic of the
FIMM FIR Mauritius ACC  Mauritius
FKKK FIR Douala ACC  Cameroon
FLFI FIR Lusaka ACC  Zambia
FMCX FIR Comoros ACC  Comoros
FMMM FIR Antananarivo ACC  Madagascar
FNAN FIR Luanda ACC  Angola
FOOO FIR Libreville ACC  Gabon
FQBE FIR Beira ACC  Mozambique
FSSS FIR Seychelles ACC  Seychelles
FTTT FIR N'Djamena ACC  Chad
FVHF FIR Harare ACC  Zimbabwe
FWLL FIR Lilongwe ACC  Malawi
FYWF FIR Windhoek ACC  Namibia