ABSTRACT

Avionics provide crews and passengers with an array of capabilities. Cockpit crews can operate with fewer pilots, greater efficiency, and immediate critical information. Passengers can enjoy the ultimate in inflight entertainment: live television and audio broadcasts and access to the Internet and e-mail.

Since avionics are the among most ex

part |2 pages

Section I: Elements

chapter 2|16 pages

ARINC 429

chapter 3|10 pages

Commercial Standard Digital Bus

chapter 4|24 pages

Head-Up Displays

chapter 5|22 pages

Head-Mounted Displays

chapter 7|22 pages

Night Vision Goggles

chapter 8|10 pages

Speech Recognition and Synthesis

chapter 10|30 pages

Batteries

part |2 pages

Section II: Functions

part |2 pages

Section III: Requirements, Design Analysis, Validation, and Certification

chapter 19|4 pages

Setting Requirements

chapter 20|18 pages

Digital Avionics Modeling and Simulation

chapter 21|20 pages

Formal Methods

chapter 22|22 pages

Electronic Hardware Reliability

chapter 23|14 pages

Certification of Civil Avionics

chapter 24|18 pages

Processes for Engineering a System

chapter 25|16 pages

Electromagnetic Environment (EME)

part |2 pages

Section IV: Software

part |2 pages

Section VP: Implementation

chapter 28|24 pages

Fault-Tolerant Avionics

chapter 29|8 pages

Boeing B-777

chapter 30|6 pages

New Avionics Systems-Airbus A330/A340

chapter 31|16 pages

McDonnell Douglas MD-11 Avionics System

chapter 32|12 pages

Lockheed F-22 Raptor

chapter 33|14 pages

Advanced Distributed Architectures