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The work reported in this paper has been supported in part by the Boeing Company under contract CMU-BA-GTA-1-BOEING and the CMU Robotics Institute. The authors would like to thank Paul C. Parks and Patrick D. Hoy of the Boeing Company for sharing their expertise and providing valuable feedback and ideas about this work. Additionally, the authors are grateful to the reviewers for their insightful comments and suggestions with respect to earlier versions of this paper.
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Note that no attempt is currently made to enforce any of the real-world constraints that govern the maneuverability of a vehicle being routed in this manner. Refinement of these large-grained route vectors could be performed later as an iterative post-processing step. Alternatively, the route modifier itself could be enhanced to generate more detailed and feasible alterations.
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Note, as previously, that this method generates rather simple air routes: the expectation is that a more sophisticated route planner will eventually be employed for this process.
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The total central processing unit time required by the current version of the system to generate both this octree and the priming run octree from Figure 5 is 40.4 s (Franz Allegro Common Lisp v8.1 on a 2.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Apple iMac).
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Referring back to Figure 8, the five bases shown across the top of the figure were removed.
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012 2012 Cambridge University Press
| David W. Hildum, Stephen F. Smith. 2012. Scheduling safe movement of air traffic in crowded air spaces. The Knowledge Engineering Review 27(3)309−331, doi: 10.1017/S0269888912000239 |





