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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
161

Strategies to design a cost-effective hub network for sparse air travel demand in Africa

Ssamula, Bridget. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D (Faculty of Engineering, Built Environment and Information Technology)) -- Univerersity of Pretoria, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references.
162

The aircraft protocol to the Cape Town Convention on aircraft financing a civil lawyer's perspective /

Von Planta, Niclas January 1900 (has links)
Written for the Institute of Air and Space Law. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2010/04/16). Includes bibliographical references.
163

An integrated decision-making framework for transportation architectures application to aviation systems design /

Lewe, Jung-Ho. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2005. / Amy R. Pritchett, Committee Member ; Moore, Mark D., Committee Member ; Wilhite, Alan, Committee Member ; Schrage, Daniel P., Committee Chair ; Mavris, Dimitri N., Committee Co-Chair ; DeLaurentis, Daniel A., Committee Member. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
164

An integrative assessment of the commercial air transportation system via adaptive agents

Lim, Choon Giap. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D)--Aerospace Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2009. / Committee Chair: Dimitri Mavris; Committee Member: Daniel Schrage; Committee Member: Hojong Baik; Committee Member: Jung-Ho Lewe; Committee Member: Kurt Neitzke. Part of the SMARTech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Collection.
165

Adapting the existing regime for the contemporary world to achieve global civil aviation safety a developing country perspective /

Ahmad, Md. Tanveer January 1900 (has links)
Written for the Institute of Air and Space Law. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2010/04/28). Includes bibliographical references.
166

Issues and prospects in interurban air transport A study of socio-economic, geographic and technical aspects of the development of air travel,

Elle, Björn J., January 1968 (has links)
Akademisk avhandling--Tekniska högskolan, Stockholm. / Extra t.p., with thesis statement, inserted. Bibliography: p. 201-204.
167

The geography of air freight and metropolitan economies potential connections /

Al Kaabi, Khaula Abdulla. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2010. / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed Jul. 5, 2010). Directed by Keith Debbage; submitted to the Dept. of Geography. Includes bibliographical references (p. 181-194).
168

An integrated decision-making framework for transportation architectures application to aviation systems design /

Lewe, Jung-Ho. January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Georgia Institute of Technology, 2005. / Also available online from the website Georgia Institute of Technology (http://etd.gatech.edu/). Vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 271-280).
169

Criteria for forecasting intercity air travel

Oehm, Peter Friedrich January 1967 (has links)
Airports, as terminals for air transportation, are places for both the movement of passengers and freight. They have a major influence on urban development. The significance of air transportation is often underestimated by civic officials and transportation planners. Functionally, airports are no different from the older and well established rail or port terminals around which most of our contemporary metropolises have developed. An understanding of the nature of present and future air traffic enables the transportation planner to foresee the urban spatial structure and its general relationship to the intercity transportation network. Before the impact of the airport upon the regional urban structure can be ascertained, it is necessary to establish the position and function of the airport within the regional transportation infrastructure. In order to determine this, it is necessary to know the present and future travel movements emanating from it and terminating there. Herein an hypothesis is postulated to determine the relative significance of a set of selected factors upon Vancouver's intercity air travel and ultimately their influence upon its spatial structure. INTERCITY AIR PASSENGER TRAFFIC IS INFLUENCED BY FOUR MAJOR FACTORS: POPULATION, INTERCITY AIR DISTANCE, INTERCITY LINE TIME, AND INTERCITY LINE PRICE. THIS SET OF INDEPENDENT VARIABLES CAN BE POSTULATED IN A MATHIMATICAL MODEL TO ADEQUATELY DESCRIBE AND FORECAST LEVELS OF INTERCITY AIR PASSENGER TRAFFIC. A description and review of current air traffic forecasting methods is continued out in Chapter II. Five methods are-outlined as follows: the market analysis technique, the national income method, the city analysis approach, the econometric model, and the gravity model technique. The gravity model technique is selected for emphasis in this thesis. Chapter II presents in turn a brief history of the evolution of the gravity model as a traffic predicting device. It is shown that the gravity model is a valid predictive device for forecasting the gross- traffic movements between two traffic centres. Chapter III is devoted to a discussion of the significance of the gravity model to air traffic prediction. As generally conceived, the gravity model relates the influence of urban population and interurban distance to intercity air traffic movements. This traditional theory of gravitational interactance has been modified by a number of air transportation researchers. Multiple regression analysis is the primary method of Investigation in each of these studies. By means of regression analysis, the variables, as selected for inclusion in the hypothesis, have been shown to have validity in some United States cities, Certain major assumptions are set out in order that the selected variables can be isolated and studied in the allotted time period. The limitations imposed upon each of the selected variables are outlined in Chapter IV. In Chapter IV linear regression analysis is used to obtain the relative significance of each variable as an air traffic determinant. The validity for inclusion of a variable as a factor of air traffic generation, is determined by the coefficient of correlation for that variable. The coefficients of correlation for the selected variables ranged from 0.76 to 0.85. This would indicate that the selected variables are valid components of the relationship as postulated in the hypothesis. Chapter V outlines the basic method of research used. The main techniques employed include the gravity model and multiple regression analysis. By this analysis in an iterative manner, several valid relationships have been established between air traffic volume and the selected variables. However, while these relationships are considered to be reasonable, their validity is affected by constraints placed on them in time, in space, and in data as is presented-in Chapters V and VI. Prom these relationships, certain conclusions are postulated. Gravity models are useful in examining the relationship between demographic factors, transport factors, and intercity air passenger traffic. Distance proved to be a variably important factor. It appears to influence air traffic in a definite manner which depends upon the population of the study cities. Distance, according to the research, is less of a restrictive factor for travel involving larger cities as is shown in Table 10. As for intercity travel time, there is no doubt that it is an important factor on some routes. In particular, differences in time resulting from different types of equipment may affect a traveller's decision. The apparent friction effect of time/distance for travel among smaller cities may only reflect the fact that slower aircraft are used to serve these small communities. It is possible that the introduction of short haul jet aircraft will minimize this difference. The regression equation developed here can only be used as a predictive device in certain cases, in particular, on routes connecting large population centres. On many routes, the standard deviations are low, and, thus predictions are reasonably accurate. That is, when annual predicted traffic is within 20 percent of actual annual traffic, it is accepted as a good projection. However, the relationships, as established, leave much of the air traffic variability unexplained. Consequently, areas for further study are suggested in the concluding portion of the thesis. The research areas recommended for further study should include several recent developments in intercity common carrier transportation. These technological achievements include: (l) the development of a better short haul aircraft (ie. D.C. 9 or Boeing 737); (2) the provision of jumbo jets by 1970; (3) the introduction of V.T.O.L. and S.T.O.L. services by 1973; (4) the provision of a commercial supersonic vehicle by 1975; and, (5) the inauguration of high speed passenger train services on routes of 100 to 500 miles in length. In Canada and the United States, the degree of success of these new experimental passenger train services places definite limitations on the validity of predicting short haul air traffic over a long time period. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of / Graduate
170

North Atlantic versus transcontinental air transport passenger services : cost analysis

Vondracek, George Joseph January 1969 (has links)
The purpose of this study is twofold: first, to determine whether the level of passenger fares effective on the North Atlantic routes bears close relationship to the cost of operating these routes; and, second, to test a hypothesis that rate making under the International Air Transport Association regulations on the North Atlantic results in a passenger fare/ cost spread in excess of that existing in the Canadian transcontinental commercial air service. While these objectives are intended to reflect general relationships which have existed for some time in both of these markets, only recent statistics are employed to exemplify them. The 1966 data are used throughout the study supplemented by 1965 and 1967 information where deemed necessary. The assumption is made that the aircraft operating costs, or direct costs, incurred in airline operations on the North Atlantic in 1966 were similar to those experienced in providing the Canadian transcontinental service as the aircraft used (DC-8 category) and the average stage length of the routes were similar in both markets. However, as demonstrated through the study, there are differences in the regulatory and economic conditions between the two markets which might have influenced development of these markets, resulting in different application of pricing principles in each. The cost and performance data for selected types of turbo-jet and turbo-fan powered aircraft operated by U.S. carriers on International/ Territorial routes in 1966 are tabulated and analyzed by individual cost category. The analysis progresses from general grouping to specific types of DC-8 equipment and to cost analysis of Pan American World Airways Inc. flying DC-8 aircraft on Atlantic routes in that year. A comparative analysis is first performed on statistics relating U.S. international and Canadian North Atlantic cost experience in 1966. The second part is concerned with comparison of cost levels between Canadian North Atlantic and transcontinental services. In the final phase, various cost concepts are introduced and the available data grouped according to criteria of direct and indirect costs, out-of-pocket and fully allocated cost categories. The fully allocated costs of the North Atlantic and transcontinental Canadian services are compared with passenger fares effective in each market in 1966. It is concluded that the level of passenger fares effective on the North Atlantic routes in 1966 bore very little relationship to the cost of airline operations in that market in the same year. An example presented in the thesis indicates that one-way economy passenger fare between Montreal and London was set at 140 per cent of fully allocated cost of operating this route, at the average load factor of 60.3 per cent. The cost/fare spread in the North Atlantic services, at 40 per cent over fully allocated cost of operation, is much higher than that experienced in the Canadian transcontinental service, at 15 per cent over fully allocated cost. While the conclusions might be valid for other IATA carriers operating on the North Atlantic, it must be borne in mind that only Canadian and U.S. carriers’ cost and performance data were analyzed in the thesis. / Business, Sauder School of / Graduate

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