Drawing on a recent flight demonstration conducted in the North Texas region, NASA researchers, federal aviation authorities, and local law enforcement agencies collaborated to explore how emergency drones can be granted real-time airspace priority.
A Sky Increasingly Shared
As urban airspace becomes increasingly populated with commercial drones carrying out deliveries, inspections, and a host of other tasks, the challenge of managing these unmanned vehicles safely and efficiently has grown more pressing.
Just as road traffic management systems evolved to accommodate emergency vehicles, granting them right-of-way through lights, sirens, and legal frameworks, aviation authorities now face a parallel challenge: establishing similar priority mechanisms for public safety drones operating in shared airspace.
NASA's Air Traffic Management and Safety project, based at Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley, has been at the forefront of developing the tools, data frameworks, and operational protocols needed to manage this emerging aerial environment. The agency has worked closely with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), which oversees all civil airspace in the United States, and has been actively testing pathways for integrating commercial drone operations into the national airspace system.
The North Texas Flight Exercise
The flight exercise conducted in North Texas brought together an impressive coalition of stakeholders, including researchers from NASA's Ames Research Center, the FAA, the Texas Department of Public Safety, and the police departments of Fort Worth, Arlington, and Irving. Industry partners such as Drone Sense, Avision, and ANRA Technologies also participated, providing drone airspace management platforms that formed the technological backbone of the demonstration.
At the heart of the exercise was a deceptively simple but operationally critical question, when a public safety drone needs to move through shared airspace quickly and safely, how does the broader system respond? The answer, as the exercise demonstrated, involves a combination of automated airspace management tools and real-time communication between public safety officials.
When a police, fire, or rescue drone was launched during the simulation, other commercial drones in the vicinity were directed to move aside, much like vehicles on a road yielding to an ambulance with its sirens blaring. When multiple public safety agencies responded simultaneously to simulated emergencies, their officials coordinated to determine which drone operations should receive the highest priority at any given moment.
"Just as ambulances use lights and sirens to signal vehicles to move out of the way, public safety operators require the ability to share airspace safely," said Abhay Borade, a research lead for the Air Traffic Management and Safety project at NASA Ames. He emphasized that the goal is not simply to benefit emergency responders at the expense of commercial operators, but to find approaches that prioritize safety for all while ensuring efficient use of shared airspace.
The Challenge of Unpredictable Flight Paths
One of the most important insights to emerge from the North Texas exercise was a clearer understanding of how fundamentally different public safety drone operations are from commercial ones. Commercial drones typically follow pre-planned, predictable routes optimized for efficiency and safety. A delivery drone, for example, generally flies along a designated corridor from a warehouse to a customer's doorstep, with its route logged and approved in advance.
First responder drones, by contrast, operate in a far more dynamic and reactive manner. During a search-and-rescue mission, a pursuit, or when scanning a hazardous environment, these drones may need to change course suddenly and without warning. They must respond to real-world developments on the ground, a suspect changing direction, a fire spreading unexpectedly, a missing person spotted in a new location, making advance route planning essentially impossible.
To explore how these unpredictable movements might affect nearby commercial drone activity, NASA researchers devised a creative simulation: a drone was tasked with following an officer driving an SUV erratically, mimicking the aerial pursuit of a fleeing suspect in a vehicle chase. This exercise generated valuable data on how sudden, unplanned directional changes by a public safety drone ripple through the surrounding airspace, forcing nearby commercial drones to respond and adapt.
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"By working closely with industry and federal partners, we're helping build the data, tools, and traffic management frameworks needed to ensure the future of drone operations is safe, responsible, and scalable for everyone," said Shivanjli Sharma, Air Traffic Management and Safety project manager at NASA Ames.
A Blueprint for Tomorrow
The North Texas flight exercise represents a meaningful step forward in NASA's mission to build an airspace management ecosystem capable of supporting the full range of drone operations expected to emerge over the coming decades. By testing real-time airspace prioritization tools in a live, multi-agency environment, researchers have gathered critical data and demonstrated the feasibility of concepts that will be essential to safe drone integration.
As commercial drone activity continues to grow and public safety agencies increasingly rely on unmanned systems for law enforcement, firefighting, and emergency response, the need for sophisticated, adaptive airspace management frameworks will only intensify. NASA's collaborative approach, bringing together federal regulators, local agencies, and private industry partners, positions the agency well to lead this effort.
Journal Reference
NASA Explores Prioritizing First Response Drones in Crowded Skies - NASA. (2026, April 30). NASA. https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/ames/nasa-explores-prioritizing-first-response-drones-in-crowded-skies/
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