Toward Low-Altitude Airspace Management and UAV Operations: Requirements, Architecture and Enabling Technologies
By: Guiyang Luo , Jinglin Li , Qixun Zhang and more
Potential Business Impact:
Drones fly safely and work together.
The low-altitude economy (LAE) is rapidly advancing toward intelligence, connectivity, and coordination, bringing new challenges in dynamic airspace management, unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) operation, and security management. Existing systems remain fragmented and lack effective coordination. To bridge these gaps, we propose UTICN (Ubiquitous and Trusted Intelligent Cellular-native Network) for LAE, a unified cellular-native architecture that integrates multi-domain sensing, high-precision positioning, intelligent aircraft-to-everything communication, dynamic airspace management, and UAV operational services. UTICN introduces key technologies such as integrated sensing and communication (ISAC), passive and active positioning, intelligent machine communication, swarm coordination, and control-data decoupled management frameworks. We demonstrate UTICN's feasibility through two use cases, i.e., a city-level LAE management platform and a multi-frequency collaborative ISAC system. This work provides a fundamental reference for building a unified operational foundation and airspace management architecture for the LAE.
Similar Papers
Toward Realization of Low-Altitude Economy Networks: Core Architecture, Integrated Technologies, and Future Directions
Networking and Internet Architecture
Makes drones and flying cars safer and smarter.
From Turbulence to Tranquility: AI-Driven Low-Altitude Network
Signal Processing
Drones fly smarter, safer, and work better together.
Satellite-Assisted Low-Altitude Economy Networking: Concepts, Applications, and Opportunities
Networking and Internet Architecture
Satellites help drones fly anywhere, anytime.