Definition
VFR navigation charts published by the FAA at a scale of 1:500,000, depicting topography, airports, airspace boundaries, navigation aids, obstructions, and other features needed for visual flight in a defined geographic region. Each sectional covers a named area of the United States and is updated on a regular publication cycle.
Plain English
Paper or digital maps designed for pilots flying by sight. They show the ground, airports, airspace, towers, and other things you need to see and avoid while navigating visually.
Context Anchor
Pilots use Sectional Aeronautical Charts during preflight planning and may keep them available in the cockpit during visual flights.
Derivation
From Latin sectio, 'a cutting,' because each chart covers one 'section' of the country. Aeronautical comes from Greek aero (air) + nautikos (relating to ships or navigation) -- literally 'air navigation.' Together: a navigation map covering one section of the airspace.
Why Pilots Care
They supply the visual references needed to navigate safely, maintain situational awareness, and comply with airspace rules without depending only on instruments or GPS.
Analogy
Like a detailed road map for driving that marks highways, towns, and restricted zones, except this version is scaled and labeled for aircraft.
Intuition Check
“Sectional” does not mean a part of the airplane or a divided cockpit item. Here it means a chart that covers one geographic section of the country for aviation use.
Example Sentence 1
Before the cross-country flight, the student pilot laid out the sectional aeronautical chart and traced the planned route around the Class B airspace.
Example Sentence 2
Before takeoff, she checked the sectional for Class B airspace boundaries and prominent landmarks along the route.