Automatic Identification System (AIS) : System Ships Vessel Traffic Services Vessels Data Ships Marine Radar
Automatic Identification System (AIS) : System Ships Vessel Traffic Services Vessels Data Ships Marine Radar
Automatic Identification System (AIS) : System Ships Vessel Traffic Services Vessels Data Ships Marine Radar
(AIS)
The Automatic Identification System (AIS) is an automatic tracking system used on
ships and by vessel traffic services (VTS) for identifying and locating vessels by
electronically exchanging data with other nearby ships AIS Base stations and Satellites.
When satellites are used to detect AIS signatures then the term Satellite-AIS (S-AIS)is
used. AIS information supplements marine radar, which continues to be the primary
method of collision avoidance for water transport.
A marine traffic coordinator using AIS and radar to manage vessel traffic.
An AIS-equipped system on board a ship presents the bearing and distance of nearby
vessels in a radar-like display format.
Collision avoidance
AIS was developed to avoid collisions among large vessels at sea that are not within
range of shore-based systems. Due to the limitations of VHF radio communications, and
because not all vessels are equipped with AIS, the system is meant to be used primarily
as a means of lookout and to determine the risk of collision rather than as an automatic
collision avoidance system, in accordance with the International Regulations for
Preventing Collisions at Sea.
A vessel's text-only AIS display, listing nearby vessels' range, bearings, and names
When a ship is navigating at sea, information about the movement and identity of other
ships in the vicinity is critical for navigators to make decisions to avoid collision with
other ships and dangers (shoal or rocks). Visual observation (e.g., unaided, binoculars,
and night vision), audio exchanges (e.g., whistle, horns, and VHF radio), and radar or
Automatic Radar Plotting Aid are historically used for this purpose. These preventative
mechanisms, however, sometimes fail due to time delays, radar limitations,
miscalculations, and display malfunctions and can result in a collision.
While requirements of AIS are to display only very basic text information, the data
obtained can be integrated with a graphical electronic chart or a radar display, providing
consolidated navigational information on a single display.
Aids to navigation
AIS was developed with the ability to broadcast the positions and names of objects other
than vessels, such as navigational aid and marker positions and dynamic data reflecting
the marker's environment (e.g., currents and climatic conditions). These aids can be
located on shore, such as in a lighthouse, or on water, platforms, or buoys. The U.S.
Coast Guard has suggested that AIS might replace racon (radar beacons) currently used
for electronic navigation aids.
The ability to broadcast navigational aid positions has also created the concepts of
Synthetic AIS and Virtual AIS. In the first case, an AIS transmission describes the
position of a physical marker but the signal itself originates from a transmitter located
elsewhere. For example, an on-shore base station might broadcast the position of ten
floating channel markers, each of which is too small to contain a transmitter itself. In the
second case, it can mean AIS transmissions that indicate a marker which does not exist
physically, or a concern which is not visible such as submerged rocks or a shipwreck.
Although such virtual aids would only be visible to AIS-equipped ships, the low cost of
maintaining them could lead to their usage when physical markers are unavailable.