Definition
An FAA-certified professional responsible for directing the movement of aircraft on the ground and in flight to maintain safe separation, sequence traffic, and provide information and clearances to pilots. ATCSs work in control towers, terminal radar approach control (TRACON) facilities, air route traffic control centers (ARTCCs), and flight service stations.
Plain English
The trained person whose voice you hear when you call air traffic control. They keep aircraft safely apart and tell pilots when and where they can taxi, take off, fly, and land.
Context Anchor
Seen in taxi, ground-control, tower, and instrument procedure discussions when the handbook refers to the controller giving instructions to pilots.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots receive taxi instructions, traffic advisories, and clearances directly from an ATCS, which prevents runway incursions and maintains safe spacing.
Intuition Check
An ATCS is not just any aviation specialist. In this context, it means the authorized air traffic controller providing instructions or information to aircraft.
Example Sentence 1
The air traffic control specialist in the tower issued taxi instructions to runway 27.
Example Sentence 2
During peak hours the ATCS coordinated departures to maintain efficient flow across multiple runways.