Why can fewer nighttime flights still leave a runway vulnerable?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Fewer staff cover more jobs
Fewer staff cover more jobs ✓ — Correct! Light traffic often comes with thinner staffing and merged duties. That can work smoothly when nothing unusual happens, but it leaves less spare attention when a runway crossing, landing aircraft, and emergency response all overlap. Night operations can look calm while actually having less buffer for surprises.
Jets land much faster — Wrong. Airliners do not normally land much faster simply because it is nighttime. The more important change is organizational: fewer people may be handling more roles, so one disruption can spread faster through the system.
Runways get narrower — Wrong. Runways do not physically shrink after dark. What shrinks is the margin in the human system: fewer staffed positions, more combined duties, and sometimes more fatigue or attention strain during an abnormal event.
More Transportation questions
- Why can one runway crash cripple a whole airport?
- Why isn't a go-around always possible at the last moment?
- Why doesn't a radioed 'Stop!' mean instant braking?
- Why can one runway emergency make a second mistake more likely?
- Why do runway crashes often come from several small failures at once?
- Why doesn't a jet's anti-collision system simply stop a runway crash?
