Sortie
Its the area of a aircraft that has the controls and operational systems to fly the craft
Military Contingencies · Classified Missions · Politically Sensitive Missions · Routine Aircraft Carrier Operations or other training activities
Military Contingencies · Classified Missions · Politically Sensitive Missions · Routine Aircraft Carrier Operations or other training activities
I'm not sure what you're after here, but in the civilian world, airlines, charter operators, flight schools, large companies, etc., normally refer to their aircraft as a fleet. In the military, the smallest group of aircraft under the same operational control would be referred to as a squadron.Squadron
Military aircraft do not have flight attendants. If you are perhaps asking how to be assigned to a military chartered flight, you would need to already be a flight attendant, and check with the head office of your airline.
It depends on the national state of emergency. If there is a state of national emergency then all civilian aircraft are usually grounded and the military have precedence.
for flight characteristic to be stable during flight at fuselage mid to aft section
In most airforces a 'flight' is 2-4 aircraft, next grouping is a 'squadron', usually 9-12 aircraft. then a 'wing' , 30-36 aircraft.
Ole Steen Hansen has written: 'Denmark' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature 'Seaplanes and Naval Aviation (The Story of Flight, 12)' 'Helicopters (The Story of Flight, 12)' 'The A-10 Thunderbolt' 'Weird & Wonderful Aircraft (The Story of Flight, 12)' 'the Story of Flight Military Aircraft of WWI' 'The Wright Brothers and Other Pioneers of Flight (Hansen, Ole Steen. Story of Flight.)' 'The F/A-22 Raptor (Edge Books)' 'Modern Military Aircraft (Hansen, Ole Steen. Story of Flight.)' 'Military aircraft of WWI' -- subject(s): Aerial operations, Airplanes, Military, History, Juvenile literature, Military Airplanes, World War, 1914-1918 'The Wright Brothers and Other Pioneers of Flight (The Story of Flight, 6)' 'Aircraft (Twentieth Century Inventions)' '1945' -- subject(s): Campaigns, World War, 1939-1945, Nineteen forty-five, A.D. 'The B-2 Spirit Stealth Bomber (Edge Books)' 'The Story of Flight' 'Denmark (Country Insights)' 'Seaplanes' 'Aircraft' -- subject(s): Airplanes, Juvenile literature 'Space Flight (The Story of Flight, 12)' 'Weird And Wonderful Aircraft' 'Flying for Fun (Story of Flight)'
The flight deck...
Because aircraft need to be refuelled somewhere, and in-flight refueling is mainly reserved by the military.
Most military fighter jets run with a single pilot and a flight officer. The Flight Officer is not trained to fly the aircraft.