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Commercial aviation

Commercial aviation is the part of civil aviation that involves operating aircraft for remuneration or hire, as opposed to private aviation.

Route map of the world's scheduled commercial airline traffic, 2009

Definition edit

Commercial aviation is not a rigorously defined category. All commercial air transport and aerial work operations are regarded as commercial aviation, as well as some general aviation flights.

Commercial air transport is defined as an aircraft operation involving the transport of passengers, cargo or mail for remuneration or hire. It includes scheduled and non-scheduled air transport operations. Aerial work is defined as an aircraft operation in which an aircraft is used for specialized services such as agriculture, construction, photography, surveying, observation and patrol, search and rescue, advertisement, etc.[1] General aviation includes commercial activities such as flight instruction, aerial work, and corporate and business aviation, as well as non-commercial activities such as recreational flying.

Most commercial aviation activities require at minimum a commercial pilot licence, and some require an airline transport pilot licence (ATPL). In the US, the pilot in command of a scheduled air carriers' aircraft must hold an ATPL.[2] In the UK, pilots must hold an ATPL before they be pilot in command of an aircraft with 9 or more passenger seats.[3]

Not all activities involving pilot remuneration require a commercial pilot licence. For example, in European Union Aviation Safety Agency states[4] and the UK[5] it is possible to become a paid flight instructor with only a private pilot licence. Nonetheless, in the UK, flight instruction is considered a commercial operation.[6]

It is the purpose of the flight, not the aircraft or pilot, that determines whether the flight is commercial or private.[7] For example, if a commercially licensed pilot flies a plane to visit a friend or attend a business meeting, this would be a private flight. Conversely, a private pilot could legally fly a multi-engine complex aircraft carrying passengers for non-commercial purposes (no compensation paid to the pilot, and a pro rata or larger portion of the aircraft operating expenses paid by the pilot).

Potential radiation exposure edit

The magnetosphere guides cosmic ray and solar energetic particles to polar latitudes, while high-energy charged particles enter the mesosphere, stratosphere, and troposphere. These energetic particles at the top of the atmosphere shatter atmospheric atoms and molecules, creating harmful lower-energy particles that penetrate deep into the atmosphere and create measurable radiation. All aircraft flying above 8 km (26,200 feet) altitude are exposed to these particles. The dose exposure is greater in polar regions than in mid-latitude and equatorial regions. When a space weather event causes radiation exposure to exceed the safe level set by aviation authorities, the aircraft's flight path is diverted.[8]

While the most significant — but highly unlikely — health consequences of atmospheric radiation exposure include death from radiation-induced cancer due to long-term exposure, many lifestyle-degrading and career-impacting cancer forms can also occur.[9][10] A cancer diagnosis can have significant career impact for a commercial pilot. A cancer diagnosis can ground a pilot temporarily or permanently. International guidelines from the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) have been developed to mitigate this statistical risk.[11][12][13] The ICRP recommends effective dose limits of a 5-year average of 20 mSv per year with no more than 50 mSv in a single year for nonpregnant, occupationally exposed persons, and 1 mSv per year for the general public. Radiation dose limits are not engineering limits. In the U.S., they are treated as an upper limit of acceptability and not a regulatory limit.[14]

Measurement of radiation at altitudes above 8 km (26,000 ft) has historically been done by instruments that record the data on board where the data are then processed later on the ground. However, a system of real-time radiation measurement has been developed through the NASA Automated Radiation Measurements for Aerospace Safety (ARMAS) program.[15] ARMAS has flown hundreds of flights since 2013, mostly on research aircraft, and sent the data to the ground through Iridium satellite links. The goal is to assimilate this data into physics-based global radiation models, e.g., NASA's Nowcast of Atmospheric Ionizing Radiation System (NAIRAS), so as to provide the weather of the radiation environment rather than the climatology.

History edit

United States edit

Origins edit

 
Areas covered by commercial air routes in 1925

Harry Bruno and Juan Trippe were early promoters of commercial aviation.

The Air Commerce Act of 1926 began to regularize commercial aviation by establishing standards, facilitation, and promotion. An Aeronautical Branch was established in the Department of Commerce with William P. MacCracken Jr. as director. To promote commercial aviation, he told town fathers that "Communities without airports would be communities without airmail."

Writing for Collier's in 1929, he noted "Commercial aviation is the first industry inspired by hero-worship and built upon heros". He cited the promotion in South America by Herbert Dargue in early 1927. After his 1927 trans-Atlantic flight, Charles Lindbergh made a tour of the contiguous United States, paid for by the Daniel Guggenheim Foundation for the Promotion of Aeronautics. From that point, commercial aviation took off:

Roads were choked on Sundays, for weeks afterward, by motorists trying to get to Lambert Field, Lindbergh's home port in Saint Louis, to buy their first air hop. Hundreds of thousands of you went aloft for the first time that summer.[16]

 
Variety of commercial airliners at Tokyo Narita Airport

The Aeronautical Branch was charged with issuing commercial pilot licenses, airworthiness certificates, and with investigating air accidents.[17]

After 1945 edit

 
A commercial aviation scene at Palma, the airport of Mallorca, Spain. Passengers board an EasyJet Airbus A320 (2010)

After World War II, commercial aviation grew rapidly, using mostly ex-military aircraft to transport people and cargo. The experience used in designing heavy bombers such as the Boeing B-29 Superfortress and Avro Lancaster could be used for designing heavy commercial aircraft. The Douglas DC-3 also made for easier and longer commercial flights. The first commercial jet airliner to fly was the British de Havilland DH.106 Comet. By 1952, the British state airline British Overseas Airways Corporation had introduced the Comet into scheduled service. While a technical achievement, the plane suffered a series of highly public failures, including the crashing of BOAC Flight 781 and South African Airways Flight 201.[18][19] By the time the problems were overcome, other jet airliner designs had already taken to the skies.

Latin America edit

Pre-war edit

Inspired by the major players such as the United States, the Soviet Union, Russia, France and Britain in the aviation industry[clarification needed]. In the 1910s, Brazil and Argentina were among the first Latin American countries to possess the instruments of aircraft that were not all locally made, yet the aircraft was locally congregated.[20] At that time, many individuals were interested to be pilots in Latin American countries, yet there were not sufficient resources and funding to support and promote the best interests of the aviation industry.[20] Amidst these obstacles, Argentina and the Dominican Republic made efforts in creating jet aviation rather than creating and using propeller planes.[21] In 1944, the Chicago Convention on International Civil Aviation attended by all Latin American countries except Argentina drafted the clauses of aviation law.[22] The introduction of the jet fighter F-80 by the US in 1945 pushed the Latin American countries even further away from development of aviation industry because it was simply expensive to recreate the sophisticated technology of F-80.[20]

Post-war edit

The Latin American Civil Aviation Commission (LACAC) was formed in December 1973 "intended to provide civil aviation authorities in the region with an adequate framework for cooperation and coordination of activities related to civil aviation".[23] In 1976, about seven percent of the world logged in the Latin American and Caribbean region.[22] This contributed to the increase of average annual rate of air traffic.[22] Subsequently, higher passenger load factor decided the profitability of these airlines.

According to C. Bogolasky, airline pooling agreements between Latin American airlines contributed to better financial performance of the airlines. The economic problems related to the "airline capacity regulation, regulation of non-scheduled operations, tariff enforcement, high operating costs, passenger and cargo rates."[22]

Corporate social responsibility edit

Corporate social responsibility comprises an umbrella of responsibilities of an organization towards its community, stakeholders and shareholders.[24] Organizations who are socially responsible fulfill their triple bottom line obligations and dedicate efforts to minimize negative impact on stakeholders and shareholders.[24] According to "The Pyramid of Corporate Social Responsibility" by Archie B. Carroll, there are four steps of social responsibility. First, economic responsibility of an organization is to produce profit and maximize the growth of an organization. Second, legal responsibility of an organization is to be compliant with all the laws and regulations. Third, ethical responsibility of an organization to create and follow standards of right decision-making considering how it affects all the stakeholders. Fourth, philanthropic responsibility of an organization to help the community and stakeholders by "giving back".[24] The extent of fulfilling the four responsibilities defines the corporate citizenship of an organization.[24]

Delta and LATAM Airlines were the only two airlines listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index,[25][26] LATAM being the only airline company in the world to achieve 100% scores for efficiency, reliability and climate strategy in their corporate sustainability assessment.[25] LATAM promotes their corporate citizenship in their 2016 Sustainability report.[27] LATAM is affiliated with 6 countries which are Argentina, Colombia, Brazil, Ecuador, Chile, and Peru.[27] LATAM accounts for 95% of South America's air traffic.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "1. Definitions" (PDF). Annex 6, Operation of Aircraft Part I, International Commercial Air Transport – Aeroplanes (9 ed.). International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). July 2010. pp. 1, 3 and 5. ISBN 9789292315368. (PDF) from the original on 9 February 2020. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  2. ^ "14 CFR Part 121 Air Carrier Certification". Federal Aviation Administration. from the original on 2021-10-10. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  3. ^ "The EASA ATPL". Speedbird103.com. from the original on 4 April 2015. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  4. ^ EASA Part FCL, Annex 1, Subpart J, Section 2, 915.FI (b)
  5. ^ Air Navigation Order 2016, Schedule 8, Part 1, Chapter 1, Remuneration Condition.
  6. ^ "Use of National Permit to Fly for flight instruction and self fly hire | Civil Aviation Authority".
  7. ^ "FAR 1.1 General definitions, Commercial operator". from the original on 2021-09-24. Retrieved 2021-10-11.
  8. ^ FAA Advisory Circular 120-52, March 5, 1990, Radiation exposure of air carrier crew members
  9. ^ Wilson, J.W., P. Goldhagen, V. Rafnsson, J.M. Clem, and G. De Angelis (2002), Overview of Atmospheric Ionizing Radiation (AIR) Research: SST-Present, COSPAR, Houston, TX.
  10. ^ W. K., Tobiska, W. Atwell, P. Beck, E. Benton, K. Copeland, C. Dyer, B. Gersey, I. Getley, A. Hands, M. Holland, S. Hong, J. Hwang, B. Jones, K. Malone, M. M. Meier, C. Mertens, T. Phillips, K. Ryden, N. Schwadron, S. A. Wender, R. Wilkins, M. A. Xapsos, Advances in Atmospheric Radiation Measurements and Modeling Needed to Improve Air Safety, Space Weather, 13, 202–210 (2015).
  11. ^ ICRP, 1991. 1990 Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protection. ICRP Publication 60. Ann. ICRP 21 (1–3).
  12. ^ ICRP, 2005. Low-dose Extrapolation of Radiation-related Cancer Risk. ICRP Publication 99. Ann. ICRP 35 (4).
  13. ^ ICRP, 2007. The 2007 Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiologi-cal Protection. ICRP Publication 103. Ann. ICRP 37 (2–4).
  14. ^ NCRP Report No. 116 – Limitation of Exposure to Ionizing Radiation, National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (1993)
  15. ^ W. K., Tobiska, D. Bouwer, D. Smart, M. Shea, J. Bailey, L. Didkovsky, K. Judge, H. Garrett, W. Atwell, B. Gersey, R. Wilkins, D. Rice, R. Schunk, D. Bell, C. Mertens, X. Xu, M. Wiltberger, S. Wiley, E. Teets, B. Jones, S. Hong, K. Yoon, Global real-time dose measurements using the Automated Radiation Measurements for Aerospace Safety (ARMAS) system, Space Weather, 14, 1053–1080 (2016).
  16. ^ McCracken, William P. Jr.; Courtney, W. B. (1929-12-21). "It's Hard to Get You Up: Selling aviation in America". Collier's. pp. 10–11.
  17. ^ The First Federal Regulator for Aviation 2017-10-03 at the Wayback Machine from Federal Aviation Administration
  18. ^ "On This Day – 10 January – 1954: Comet jet crashes with 35 on board". BBC News. 2008. Retrieved February 15, 2024.
  19. ^ Whitney, Peter D. (April 10, 1954). "Comet Wreckage Found in Sea; 3 Americans Among 21 Victims". The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved February 15, 2024.
  20. ^ a b c De La Pedraja, Rene (2013). The Influence of Airpower upon History. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 145–176.
  21. ^ "Post WWII Highlights in Latin America Aviation History". smithsonianeducation.org. from the original on 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  22. ^ a b c d Bogolasky, Jose C. "Air Transport in Latin America: The Expanding Role of the Latin American Civil Aviation Commission". Journal of Air Law and Commerce. 44: 75–107. from the original on 2021-01-18. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
  23. ^ "Latin American Civil Aviation Commission (LACAC)". IBAS. from the original on 2020-11-23. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  24. ^ a b c d Ferell; Fraedrich; Ferell (2018). "Chapter 2, Section 2". Business Ethics: Ethical Decision Making & Cases, 12th Edition. Cengage. ISBN 978-1337614436.
  25. ^ a b "LATAM Airlines Group is the leading airline in the Americas on the Dow Jones Sustainability 'World' Index as responsible investment reaches new heights". www.latam.com. from the original on 2020-04-08. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  26. ^ "Delta named to 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index". Delta News Hub. from the original on 2020-04-08. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  27. ^ a b "Corporate citizenship". www.latam.com. from the original on 2020-04-08. Retrieved 2020-04-02.

External links edit

  • Transport Canada Flight Test Guide – Commercial Pilot License – Aeroplane

commercial, aviation, part, civil, aviation, that, involves, operating, aircraft, remuneration, hire, opposed, private, aviation, route, world, scheduled, commercial, airline, traffic, 2009contents, definition, potential, radiation, exposure, history, united, . Commercial aviation is the part of civil aviation that involves operating aircraft for remuneration or hire as opposed to private aviation Route map of the world s scheduled commercial airline traffic 2009Contents 1 Definition 2 Potential radiation exposure 3 History 3 1 United States 3 1 1 Origins 3 1 2 After 1945 3 2 Latin America 3 2 1 Pre war 3 2 2 Post war 4 Corporate social responsibility 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDefinition editCommercial aviation is not a rigorously defined category All commercial air transport and aerial work operations are regarded as commercial aviation as well as some general aviation flights Commercial air transport is defined as an aircraft operation involving the transport of passengers cargo or mail for remuneration or hire It includes scheduled and non scheduled air transport operations Aerial work is defined as an aircraft operation in which an aircraft is used for specialized services such as agriculture construction photography surveying observation and patrol search and rescue advertisement etc 1 General aviation includes commercial activities such as flight instruction aerial work and corporate and business aviation as well as non commercial activities such as recreational flying Most commercial aviation activities require at minimum a commercial pilot licence and some require an airline transport pilot licence ATPL In the US the pilot in command of a scheduled air carriers aircraft must hold an ATPL 2 In the UK pilots must hold an ATPL before they be pilot in command of an aircraft with 9 or more passenger seats 3 Not all activities involving pilot remuneration require a commercial pilot licence For example in European Union Aviation Safety Agency states 4 and the UK 5 it is possible to become a paid flight instructor with only a private pilot licence Nonetheless in the UK flight instruction is considered a commercial operation 6 It is the purpose of the flight not the aircraft or pilot that determines whether the flight is commercial or private 7 For example if a commercially licensed pilot flies a plane to visit a friend or attend a business meeting this would be a private flight Conversely a private pilot could legally fly a multi engine complex aircraft carrying passengers for non commercial purposes no compensation paid to the pilot and a pro rata or larger portion of the aircraft operating expenses paid by the pilot Potential radiation exposure editThe magnetosphere guides cosmic ray and solar energetic particles to polar latitudes while high energy charged particles enter the mesosphere stratosphere and troposphere These energetic particles at the top of the atmosphere shatter atmospheric atoms and molecules creating harmful lower energy particles that penetrate deep into the atmosphere and create measurable radiation All aircraft flying above 8 km 26 200 feet altitude are exposed to these particles The dose exposure is greater in polar regions than in mid latitude and equatorial regions When a space weather event causes radiation exposure to exceed the safe level set by aviation authorities the aircraft s flight path is diverted 8 While the most significant but highly unlikely health consequences of atmospheric radiation exposure include death from radiation induced cancer due to long term exposure many lifestyle degrading and career impacting cancer forms can also occur 9 10 A cancer diagnosis can have significant career impact for a commercial pilot A cancer diagnosis can ground a pilot temporarily or permanently International guidelines from the International Commission on Radiological Protection ICRP have been developed to mitigate this statistical risk 11 12 13 The ICRP recommends effective dose limits of a 5 year average of 20 mSv per year with no more than 50 mSv in a single year for nonpregnant occupationally exposed persons and 1 mSv per year for the general public Radiation dose limits are not engineering limits In the U S they are treated as an upper limit of acceptability and not a regulatory limit 14 Measurement of radiation at altitudes above 8 km 26 000 ft has historically been done by instruments that record the data on board where the data are then processed later on the ground However a system of real time radiation measurement has been developed through the NASA Automated Radiation Measurements for Aerospace Safety ARMAS program 15 ARMAS has flown hundreds of flights since 2013 mostly on research aircraft and sent the data to the ground through Iridium satellite links The goal is to assimilate this data into physics based global radiation models e g NASA s Nowcast of Atmospheric Ionizing Radiation System NAIRAS so as to provide the weather of the radiation environment rather than the climatology History editThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message United States edit Origins edit nbsp Areas covered by commercial air routes in 1925Harry Bruno and Juan Trippe were early promoters of commercial aviation The Air Commerce Act of 1926 began to regularize commercial aviation by establishing standards facilitation and promotion An Aeronautical Branch was established in the Department of Commerce with William P MacCracken Jr as director To promote commercial aviation he told town fathers that Communities without airports would be communities without airmail Writing for Collier s in 1929 he noted Commercial aviation is the first industry inspired by hero worship and built upon heros He cited the promotion in South America by Herbert Dargue in early 1927 After his 1927 trans Atlantic flight Charles Lindbergh made a tour of the contiguous United States paid for by the Daniel Guggenheim Foundation for the Promotion of Aeronautics From that point commercial aviation took off Roads were choked on Sundays for weeks afterward by motorists trying to get to Lambert Field Lindbergh s home port in Saint Louis to buy their first air hop Hundreds of thousands of you went aloft for the first time that summer 16 nbsp Variety of commercial airliners at Tokyo Narita AirportThe Aeronautical Branch was charged with issuing commercial pilot licenses airworthiness certificates and with investigating air accidents 17 After 1945 edit Main article Post war aviation nbsp A commercial aviation scene at Palma the airport of Mallorca Spain Passengers board an EasyJet Airbus A320 2010 After World War II commercial aviation grew rapidly using mostly ex military aircraft to transport people and cargo The experience used in designing heavy bombers such as the Boeing B 29 Superfortress and Avro Lancaster could be used for designing heavy commercial aircraft The Douglas DC 3 also made for easier and longer commercial flights The first commercial jet airliner to fly was the British de Havilland DH 106 Comet By 1952 the British state airline British Overseas Airways Corporation had introduced the Comet into scheduled service While a technical achievement the plane suffered a series of highly public failures including the crashing of BOAC Flight 781 and South African Airways Flight 201 18 19 By the time the problems were overcome other jet airliner designs had already taken to the skies Latin America edit Pre war edit Inspired by the major players such as the United States the Soviet Union Russia France and Britain in the aviation industry clarification needed In the 1910s Brazil and Argentina were among the first Latin American countries to possess the instruments of aircraft that were not all locally made yet the aircraft was locally congregated 20 At that time many individuals were interested to be pilots in Latin American countries yet there were not sufficient resources and funding to support and promote the best interests of the aviation industry 20 Amidst these obstacles Argentina and the Dominican Republic made efforts in creating jet aviation rather than creating and using propeller planes 21 In 1944 the Chicago Convention on International Civil Aviation attended by all Latin American countries except Argentina drafted the clauses of aviation law 22 The introduction of the jet fighter F 80 by the US in 1945 pushed the Latin American countries even further away from development of aviation industry because it was simply expensive to recreate the sophisticated technology of F 80 20 Post war edit The Latin American Civil Aviation Commission LACAC was formed in December 1973 intended to provide civil aviation authorities in the region with an adequate framework for cooperation and coordination of activities related to civil aviation 23 In 1976 about seven percent of the world logged in the Latin American and Caribbean region 22 This contributed to the increase of average annual rate of air traffic 22 Subsequently higher passenger load factor decided the profitability of these airlines According to C Bogolasky airline pooling agreements between Latin American airlines contributed to better financial performance of the airlines The economic problems related to the airline capacity regulation regulation of non scheduled operations tariff enforcement high operating costs passenger and cargo rates 22 Corporate social responsibility editCorporate social responsibility comprises an umbrella of responsibilities of an organization towards its community stakeholders and shareholders 24 Organizations who are socially responsible fulfill their triple bottom line obligations and dedicate efforts to minimize negative impact on stakeholders and shareholders 24 According to The Pyramid of Corporate Social Responsibility by Archie B Carroll there are four steps of social responsibility First economic responsibility of an organization is to produce profit and maximize the growth of an organization Second legal responsibility of an organization is to be compliant with all the laws and regulations Third ethical responsibility of an organization to create and follow standards of right decision making considering how it affects all the stakeholders Fourth philanthropic responsibility of an organization to help the community and stakeholders by giving back 24 The extent of fulfilling the four responsibilities defines the corporate citizenship of an organization 24 Delta and LATAM Airlines were the only two airlines listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index 25 26 LATAM being the only airline company in the world to achieve 100 scores for efficiency reliability and climate strategy in their corporate sustainability assessment 25 LATAM promotes their corporate citizenship in their 2016 Sustainability report 27 LATAM is affiliated with 6 countries which are Argentina Colombia Brazil Ecuador Chile and Peru 27 LATAM accounts for 95 of South America s air traffic See also edit nbsp Aviation portal nbsp Business and economics portalAirliner Flight level Direct flight Domestic flight Environmental impact of aviation including effects on climate change International flight Mainline Non stop flight Private aviationReferences edit 1 Definitions PDF Annex 6 Operation of Aircraft Part I International Commercial Air Transport Aeroplanes 9 ed International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO July 2010 pp 1 3 and 5 ISBN 9789292315368 Archived PDF from the original on 9 February 2020 Retrieved 17 March 2019 14 CFR Part 121 Air Carrier Certification Federal Aviation Administration Archived from the original on 2021 10 10 Retrieved 2021 10 10 The EASA ATPL Speedbird103 com Archived from the original on 4 April 2015 Retrieved 4 April 2015 EASA Part FCL Annex 1 Subpart J Section 2 915 FI b Air Navigation Order 2016 Schedule 8 Part 1 Chapter 1 Remuneration Condition Use of National Permit to Fly for flight instruction and self fly hire Civil Aviation Authority FAR 1 1 General definitions Commercial operator Archived from the original on 2021 09 24 Retrieved 2021 10 11 FAA Advisory Circular 120 52 March 5 1990 Radiation exposure of air carrier crew members Wilson J W P Goldhagen V Rafnsson J M Clem and G De Angelis 2002 Overview of Atmospheric Ionizing Radiation AIR Research SST Present COSPAR Houston TX W K Tobiska W Atwell P Beck E Benton K Copeland C Dyer B Gersey I Getley A Hands M Holland S Hong J Hwang B Jones K Malone M M Meier C Mertens T Phillips K Ryden N Schwadron S A Wender R Wilkins M A Xapsos Advances in Atmospheric Radiation Measurements and Modeling Needed to Improve Air Safety Space Weather 13 202 210 2015 ICRP 1991 1990 Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protection ICRP Publication 60 Ann ICRP 21 1 3 ICRP 2005 Low dose Extrapolation of Radiation related Cancer Risk ICRP Publication 99 Ann ICRP 35 4 ICRP 2007 The 2007 Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiologi cal Protection ICRP Publication 103 Ann ICRP 37 2 4 NCRP Report No 116 Limitation of Exposure to Ionizing Radiation National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements 1993 W K Tobiska D Bouwer D Smart M Shea J Bailey L Didkovsky K Judge H Garrett W Atwell B Gersey R Wilkins D Rice R Schunk D Bell C Mertens X Xu M Wiltberger S Wiley E Teets B Jones S Hong K Yoon Global real time dose measurements using the Automated Radiation Measurements for Aerospace Safety ARMAS system Space Weather 14 1053 1080 2016 McCracken William P Jr Courtney W B 1929 12 21 It s Hard to Get You Up Selling aviation in America Collier s pp 10 11 The First Federal Regulator for Aviation Archived 2017 10 03 at the Wayback Machine from Federal Aviation Administration On This Day 10 January 1954 Comet jet crashes with 35 on board BBC News 2008 Retrieved February 15 2024 Whitney Peter D April 10 1954 Comet Wreckage Found in Sea 3 Americans Among 21 Victims The New York Times p 1 Retrieved February 15 2024 a b c De La Pedraja Rene 2013 The Influence of Airpower upon History University Press of Kentucky pp 145 176 Post WWII Highlights in Latin America Aviation History smithsonianeducation org Archived from the original on 2008 07 03 Retrieved 2020 03 26 a b c d Bogolasky Jose C Air Transport in Latin America The Expanding Role of the Latin American Civil Aviation Commission Journal of Air Law and Commerce 44 75 107 Archived from the original on 2021 01 18 Retrieved 2020 04 08 Latin American Civil Aviation Commission LACAC IBAS Archived from the original on 2020 11 23 Retrieved 2020 03 26 a b c d Ferell Fraedrich Ferell 2018 Chapter 2 Section 2 Business Ethics Ethical Decision Making amp Cases 12th Edition Cengage ISBN 978 1337614436 a b LATAM Airlines Group is the leading airline in the Americas on the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index as responsible investment reaches new heights www latam com Archived from the original on 2020 04 08 Retrieved 2020 04 02 Delta named to 2016 Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index Delta News Hub Archived from the original on 2020 04 08 Retrieved 2020 04 02 a b Corporate citizenship www latam com Archived from the original on 2020 04 08 Retrieved 2020 04 02 External links editTransport Canada Flight Test Guide Commercial Pilot License Aeroplane Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commercial aviation amp oldid 1207642220, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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