Definition
The minimum distances air traffic control must maintain between aircraft, expressed in nautical miles laterally, feet vertically, or minutes longitudinally, to ensure safety. 'Separation' refers to the legal minimums ATC must enforce between aircraft under their control, while 'spacing' refers to the distances ATC arranges between aircraft to deliver them efficiently for approach, departure, or en route flow.
Plain English
The set distances controllers must keep between aircraft so they don't get too close to each other. Separation is the safety minimum; spacing is how controllers line aircraft up smoothly for arrivals and departures.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument procedure and NextGen discussions where new navigation and control systems allow aircraft to be managed more precisely.
Derivation
Separation' comes from Latin 'separare', meaning 'to set apart'. 'Spacing' comes from 'space', the gap between things. In ATC, both refer to keeping aircraft apart, but 'separation' carries the stricter, regulatory meaning while 'spacing' is the practical arrangement controllers create.
Why Pilots Care
Directly affects route efficiency, delay reduction, and collision avoidance in high-density airspace.
Intuition Check
Do not read this as a casual suggestion to “leave some room.” In aviation, spacing and separation requirements are formal minimums that controllers and procedures must protect.
Example Sentence 1
ADS-B coverage in the Gulf of Mexico allowed controllers to reduce spacing and separation requirements between aircraft, opening up more usable routes.
Example Sentence 2
Controllers adjust speeds to maintain spacing and separation requirements in busy terminal areas.