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Aircraft Carriers Operate In “Cycles”

Atlantic Ocean. (February 21, 2024): This photo by MC3 August Clawson expertly captures the eerie scene inside the Combat Information Center, or CIC, aboard the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS George Washington. Launching fifth generation fighters and support aircraft while at sea is a tricky and dangerous business. Sailors must maintain air traffic control while constantly scanning the skies for incoming enemy aircraft, missiles, or drones.

To accomplish this, aircraft carriers operate in flying “cycles” or packages of planes dispatched for missions at various times each day. Cyclic operations refers to the launch and recovery cycle for these various groups of aircraft aboard aircraft carriers. The shorter the cycle, the fewer aircraft can be launched and recovered. A longer cycle can include up to twenty aircraft. Flight operations go on twenty-four hours a day and in all-weather as planes are fueled, serviced, and sent back into the air.

Organized into “events,” planes are prepared for launch, spotted on the flight deck, and launched in as little as fifteen minutes. The departing cycle leaves room on the deck to recover the past cycle and the rotation continues around the clock.

Making this happen is the highly skilled Sailors aboard the Washington who keep these cycles going safely, and on time.

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