Definition
A condition in which the amount of oxygen available to the body is lower than what it normally receives at sea level. In aviation, this is caused by the drop in atmospheric pressure with altitude, which reduces the partial pressure of oxygen in inhaled air, making it harder for the lungs to load oxygen into the bloodstream.
Plain English
There is less usable oxygen reaching your body than you are used to. The air still contains roughly 21 percent oxygen, but at altitude the air is thinner, so each breath delivers less oxygen than the same breath would at sea level.
Context Anchor
Seen in hypoxia discussions, especially when learning why altitude can make a pilot unsafe before obvious symptoms appear.
Derivation
"Reduced" comes from the Latin reducere, meaning "to bring back" or "to lower." Here it simply means "lessened" — the available oxygen is lowered compared to sea-level conditions.
Why Pilots Care
It directly produces hypoxia, degrading judgment, vision, and coordination within seconds to minutes.
Grounding Statement
At 18,000 feet, each breath you take delivers only about half as much oxygen to your bloodstream as the same breath at sea level — even though the air around you still contains the same percentage of oxygen.
Intuition Check
Reduced oxygen does not mean there is no oxygen in the air. It means the body is receiving less usable oxygen than it needs.
Example Sentence 1
Climbing above 12,500 feet exposes the pilot to reduced oxygen, which is why supplemental oxygen rules begin at that altitude.
Example Sentence 2
Cabin depressurization at cruising altitude produces reduced oxygen even though the aircraft remains pressurized at lower altitudes.