payload
English
Etymology
From pay + load. From the early 20th century.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈpeɪloʊd/
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
payload (plural payloads)
- That part of a cargo that produces revenue.
- The total weight of passengers, crew, equipment, and cargo carried by an aircraft or spacecraft.
- That part of a rocket, missile, propelled stinger, or torpedo that is not concerned with propulsion or guidance, such as a warhead or satellite.
- 1990, Dave Mustaine, "Rust in Peace... Polaris", Megadeth, Rust in Peace.
- I spread disease like a dog / Discharge my payload a mile high / Rotten egg air of death wrestles your nostrils
- 2024 September 23, Vanessa Montalbano, “Air Force interested in advanced booster for hypersonic weapons”, in Inside Defense[1]:
- Vendors must also describe to the Air Force whether they have experience integrating the device with payloads from other businesses, if they are capable of supporting flight test operations and working with ground support equipment and how soon the capability can be delivered.
“Thrust Vector control must be included as a control methodology,” the service wrote in the request. “Other capability measurements of interest are, but not limited to, flight path angle, total impulse, speed, range, payload characteristics.
- 1990, Dave Mustaine, "Rust in Peace... Polaris", Megadeth, Rust in Peace.
- (computing) The functional part of a computer virus or another type of malware program, rather than the part that spreads it.
- (communication) The actual data in a data stream.
Derived terms
Translations
that part of a cargo that produces revenue
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the total weight of passengers, crew, equipment and cargo carried by an aircraft or spacecraft
|
that part of a rocket, missile, or torpedo that is not concerned with propulsion or guidance
the functional part of a computer virus rather than the part that spreads it
|
the actual data in a data stream
|