Definition
An integrated airport ground system that provides routing, guidance, surveillance, and control for aircraft and ground vehicles operating on the airport movement area. It uses sensors such as surface movement radar, multilateration, and transponder data to track every aircraft and vehicle, and combines that information with controller tools and pilot guidance aids (such as switchable taxiway lighting and stop bars) to keep traffic moving safely and efficiently in all weather and visibility conditions.
Plain English
A modern airport system that tracks every aircraft and vehicle on the ground and helps controllers route them safely, even when visibility is poor.
Context Anchor
You may see A-SMGCS mentioned in instrument procedure material, low-visibility airport operations, airport surface movement guidance, and taxi planning at larger or specially equipped airports.
Derivation
The name describes its function in plain English. 'Advanced' signals that it is a step beyond traditional ground radar — it adds automation, identification, and guidance, not just a picture of where things are.
Why Pilots Care
It lowers the chance of runway incursions and keeps surface operations moving safely when visibility is limited.
Analogy
It is like a coordinated traffic system for the airport ground area: signs, lights, monitoring, and instructions all working together so everyone knows where to go and when to stop.
Intuition Check
Do not assume A-SMGCS is an autopilot for taxiing. It supports safe ground movement, but the pilot still follows clearances, watches outside, and controls the aircraft.
Example Sentence 1
At airports with A-SMGCS, controllers can issue taxi clearances in low visibility because the system identifies and tracks each aircraft on the surface.
Example Sentence 2
Controllers activated A-SMGCS to maintain safe spacing between aircraft during the low-visibility taxi.