释义 |
deconflict, v. Mil. (orig. U.S.). Brit. |ˌdiːkənˈflɪkt|, U.S. |ˌdikənˈflɪk(t)| [‹ de- prefix + either conflict v. or conflict n.] trans. To reduce the risk of collision in (a combat situation, airspace, etc.) by separating the flight paths of one's own aircraft or airborne weaponry. Also: to coordinate (one's aircraft) in this manner.
1975Aviation Week & Space Technol. 10 Nov. 114/3 How will the system deconflict a developing hazard involving several aircraft in close proximity when alternatives (escape routes) lead to additional conflict? 1991Air Force Mag. (U.S.) June 63/3 Managing the air traffic, of course, was a mammoth task... We put in every sortie by time, by altitude, and by location to get them up to the battle. To deconflict that, the computer sits there and matches all that information. 1997Aerospace Daily (Nexis) 3 Feb. 162 The biggest problem for U.S. aircraft that would have to operate over Korea in case of hostilities between South and North Korea wouldn't be enemy aircraft, but deconflicting friendly aircraft. 2003Guardian 22 Mar. i. 5/3 Commanders announced that they were ‘deconflicting the airspace’ over southern Iraq... The land war commander, unveiled this phrase to describe the complex process of ensuring that the vast array of weaponry fired into southern Iraq does not collide. Derivatives. deconfliction n.
1981Aviation Week & Space Technol. 5 Jan. 74/3 Somebody reading this is going to scream: ‘What about *deconfliction, time-to-launch, etc?’ Well, the simple truth is that such trivia are child's play for a good engineer. 2001Time 15 Oct. 37/2 What the brass calls ‘deconfliction’—making sure warplanes and relief planes don't confuse one another—is now a major focus of the Pentagon strategy. |