Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigExact(7)
Each plane is assigned a "flight strip," which is placed in a little plastic caddy.
Whenever a plane takes off, the basic data about the flight — the type of plane, the radar I.D. number, the requested altitude, the destination — are printed out on a stiff piece of paper, perhaps one and a half by six and a half inches, known as a flight strip.
Whenever a plane takes off, the basic data about the flight the type of plane, the radar I.D. number, the requested altitude, the destination are printed out on a stiff piece of paper, perhaps one and a half by six and a half inches, known as a flight strip.
Beneath the tower, a second controller, in charge of departures once planes cleared the runway, was apparently confused because the tower controller had sent him a "flight strip" -- a computer-generated slip of paper giving the flight number, route, type of equipment and other details -- but he could not find the plane on his radar scope.
Open image in new window Fig. 7 Comparison of orthorectified night images from flight strips A-1 (left) with flight strip A-2 (right).
Open image in new window Fig. 8 RGB composition of image sequences from flight strip A-2 used for traffic monitoring.
Similar(48)
Psychologists believe that those so-called flight strips play a major role in helping controllers achieve this situation awareness.
We think of all those flight strips as cluttering and confusing the work of the office, and we fret about where all that paper will go.
The controller's flight strips are like the piles of paper on a desk: they are the physical manifestations of what goes on inside his head.
Had the computer come first — and paper second — no one would raise an eyebrow at the flight strips cluttering our air-traffic-control centers.
In the tower, controllers keep track of vital details by means of plastic "flight strips" that look like tile racks in a Scrabble game.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com