Definition
An evaluation conducted by the FAA to determine whether an airport runway permits an aircraft to depart in any direction without needing to follow a specific climb path to avoid obstacles. If the assessment confirms that obstacles do not penalize the standard climb gradient in any direction from the runway, the runway is considered to support a diverse departure, and no specific Obstacle Departure Procedure (ODP) is required for that runway.
Plain English
A check the FAA does on a runway to see if a pilot can safely climb out in any direction after takeoff without needing to follow a special obstacle-avoidance route. If it passes, the pilot has more freedom in how they leave the airport.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument departure procedure discussions, especially when deciding whether a runway needs a published obstacle departure procedure.
Derivation
Diverse' comes from the Latin 'diversus' meaning 'turned different ways' or 'varied.' Here it captures the idea that the departure can go in many different directions, not just one prescribed track.
Why Pilots Care
It determines whether a diverse departure is authorized, allowing immediate turns in any direction instead of following a specific track.
Grounding Statement
Picture lifting off, crossing the far end of the runway, climbing straight ahead first, and only turning after enough height has been gained to keep clear of nearby obstacles.
Intuition Check
“Diverse” does not just mean “varied” here. It means the departure obstacle check does not require one specific published path for obstacle clearance under standard assumptions.
Example Sentence 1
Because the runway passed the diverse departure assessment, no Obstacle Departure Procedure was published for that direction of takeoff.
Example Sentence 2
Because the diverse departure assessment passed, the pilot could depart and immediately turn toward the assigned heading without flying a published route.