Bird Strike in Aviation

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Bird strike

A01=Ahmed F. El-Sayed
aerospace engineering
aerospace manufacturing
air traffic control
aircraft engine design
airport management
applications for numerical methods
Australian Transport Safety Bureau

Author_Ahmed F. El-Sayed
aviation hazards
aviation statistics
BASH
bat strike
bird aircraft strike hazard
bird conservation
bird hit in aviation
bird ingestion
bird management in aviation
bird migration
bird species identification
bird strike prevention
Category=RN
Category=TG
Category=TRP
Civil Aviation Authority
civilian aviation
commercial aviation
Corporate Aircraft Associations
emergency management
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_tech-engineering
European Aviation Safety Agency
experimental measurement techniques
Federal Aviation Administration
fixed wing aircraft
helicopter design
history of aviation
international aviation
international shipping
international transit
international transportation
military aviation
miracle on the Hudson
ornithology
safety in aviation
Transport Canada
transportation hazard management
 wildlife hazard management

Product details

  • ISBN 9781119529736
  • Weight: 703g
  • Dimensions: 173 x 249mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jul 2019
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Groundbreaking Handbook Offers Detailed Research and Valuable Methodology to Address Dangerous and Costly Aviation Hazard 

Though annual damages from bird and bat collisions with aircraft have been estimated at $400 million in the United States and up to $1.2 billion in commercial aviation worldwide and despite numerous conferences and councils dedicated to the issue, very little has been published on this expensive and sometimes-lethal flying risk. Bird Strike in Aviation seeks to fill this gap, providing a comprehensive guide to preventing and minimizing damage caused by bird strike on aircraft.

Based on a thorough and comprehensive examination of the subject, Dr. El-Sayed offers different approaches to reducing bird strikes, including detailed coverage of the three categories necessary for such reduction, namely, awareness/education, bird management (active and passive control), and aircraft design. In addition, the text discusses the importance of cooperation between airplanes, airports and air traffic authorities as well as testing methods necessary for certification of both aircraft frame and engine. Other notable features include:

  • Statistics and analyses for bird strikes with both civil and military helicopters as well as military fixed wing aircrafts, including annual costs, critical flight altitudes, critical parts of aircraft, distance from air base and specifics of date and timing
  • Thorough review and analysis all fatal bird strike accidents and most non-fatal accidents since 1905, the first book to provide such a reference
  • The use of numerical methods in analyzing historic data (ex. probability functions, finite element methods for analyzing impact on aircraft structure, experimental measurement technique for displacement, vibration, component distortion, etc.)
  • Instruction on identification of bird species (using visual, microscopic, and DNA evidence) and details of bird migration to aid air traffic control in avoiding scenarios likely to result in collision

With its wealth of statistical data, innovative research, and practical suggestions, Bird Strike in Aviation will prove a vital resource for researchers, engineers and graduate students in aerospace engineering/manufacturing or ornithology, as well as for military and civilian pilots and flight crew or professionals in aviation authorities and air traffic control.

Dr. Ahmed F. El-Sayed is a Professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Power Engineering at Zagazig University, Egypt. He was a Senior Engineer for Egyptian Airline EGYPTAIR for 10 years, working in the maintenance, technical inspection and R&D departments. He has worked as a researcher in corporate projects with Westinghouse (USA), Rolls Royce (UK) and Arab Organization for Industry (AOI), Egypt and taught aircraft propulsion and turbomachinery courses in several universities and institutes in Egypt, Libya, Austria, Belgium, China, Japan, Russia and the USA.

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