SORTIE
'''Sortie''' is a term for deployment or despatch of one military unit, be it of aircraft, ship or, in older times, of columns of troops from a fort. The unit usually has a purpose of accomplishing a specific mission, whether alone or with other aircraft or vessels. In military aviation, it is used to indicate the total usages of individual machines, so that (for example) a group of six planes flying six missions each would amount to 36 ''sorties'', or alternatively, one mission involving six aircraft would tally six sorties.
The use of the term for military aircraft originated in naval usage. In French, ''sortie'' literally means "exit". It has evolved to mean a short period of conflict, as in the time when the vehicles and vessels are away from their carrier or local berth.
In siege warfare, a ''sortie'', or sudden issuing of troops against the enemy from a defensive position, can be launched against the besiegers by the defenders. If the sortie is through a sally port, either ''to sortie'' or 'to sally' can be used.
In spaceflight, especially for NASA's upcoming Constellation Program, the term ''sortie'' has been coined for a flight of the Orion spacecraft beyond the confluence of low-Earth orbit, such as a flight to the Moon or to the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrange Point. This term was not used by NASA for the nine Apollo flights that flew by, orbited, or landed on the Moon between 1968 and 1972.
The use of the term for military aircraft originated in naval usage. In French, ''sortie'' literally means "exit". It has evolved to mean a short period of conflict, as in the time when the vehicles and vessels are away from their carrier or local berth.
In siege warfare, a ''sortie'', or sudden issuing of troops against the enemy from a defensive position, can be launched against the besiegers by the defenders. If the sortie is through a sally port, either ''to sortie'' or 'to sally' can be used.
In spaceflight, especially for NASA's upcoming Constellation Program, the term ''sortie'' has been coined for a flight of the Orion spacecraft beyond the confluence of low-Earth orbit, such as a flight to the Moon or to the Sun-Earth L2 Lagrange Point. This term was not used by NASA for the nine Apollo flights that flew by, orbited, or landed on the Moon between 1968 and 1972.
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