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PILOT FATIGUE By Jamin Stewart
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Pilot Fatigue

Feb 16, 2016

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Pilot Fatigue. By Jamin Stewart. Safety is the Goal. Fatigue is a general lack of alertness and degradation in mental and physical performance. Fatigue in aviation Fatigue causes a pilot to fall asleep while in flight or it can affect alertness during takeoff and landing. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Pilot Fatigue

PILOT FATIGUE

By Jamin Stewart

Page 2: Pilot Fatigue

Safety is the Goal Fatigue is a general lack of alertness

and degradation in mental and physical performance.

Fatigue in aviation Fatigue causes a pilot to fall asleep

while in flight or it can affect alertness during takeoff and landing.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA ) and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) have proposed sweeping changes to ensure the safety of pilots, crew members and passengers so accidents like this will not happen.

Page 3: Pilot Fatigue

NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board)The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is an independentfederal accident investigation agency. Since its creationin 1967, the Safety Board’s mission has been to determine theprobable cause of transportation accidents and to formulatesafety recommendations to improve transportation safety.

The Safety Board’s mission is to determine the probable cause of:

all U.S. civil aviation accidents and certain public-use aircraft accidents;

selected highway accidents; railroad accidents involving passenger

trains or selected freight train accidents that result

in fatalities or significant property damage;

major marine accidents and any marine accident involving both a public and a nonpublic vessel;

pipeline accidents involving fatalities, substantial property damage, or significant environmental damage;

selected accidents resulting in the release of hazardous materials in any mode of transportation; and

selected transportation accidents that involve problems of a recurring nature or are catastrophic.

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FAA (Federal Aviation Administration)

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is responsible for ensuring the safety of civil aviation; it is functions as agency within the US Department of Transportation.

Purpose

The Federal Aviation Act of 1958 created the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) and gave it broad authority to combat aviation hazards as well broad rulemaking power. In addition, the FAA has sole responsibility for developing and maintaining a common civil-military system of air navigation and air traffic control. In 1968, Congress gave the FAA the power to set aircraft noise standards.

Today, the agency's mission is "to provide the safest, most efficient aerospace system in the world."

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Acknowledgements Mrs. Christina Reale for letting me get an behind

the scenes look at Syracuse International Airport and everyone else that

Charles Everett for getting me the behind the scenes access to Syracuse John Hancock International Airport

My mom and dad for driving me all the way up to Syracuse, New York

Miss Kim for helping me with this project

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Works Cited Genisock2. "File:Plane Crash into Hudson

Rivercroped.jpg." Wikimedia Commons. 15 Jan. 2009. Web. 13 Jan. 2011. <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Plane_crash_into_Hudson_Rivercroped.jpg>.

US Government. "File:US-NTSB-Seal.svg." Wikimedia Commons. 30 Aug. 2007. Web. 14 Jan. 2011. <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:US-NTSB-Seal.svg>.