Term
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Definition
a quantity that represents only magnitude. Expressed with a single number and units. |
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Term
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Definition
a quantity that represents magnitude and direction. |
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Definition
the amount of molecular material of which an object is comprised |
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Term
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Definition
The amount of space an object occupies |
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Term
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Definition
Mass per unit volume. ρ = m / v |
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Term
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Definition
a push or pull exerted on an object. F = m*a |
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Term
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Definition
the force exerted on an object by gravity directed toward the center of the earth |
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Term
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Definition
A force applied to a lever, at some distance perpendicular to an axis or fulcrum that tends to produce a rotation around that axis |
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Term
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Definition
done when a force acts on a body and moves it. W = F * s (s = displacement) |
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Term
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Definition
The rate of doing work or work done per unit time. P = W / t |
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Term
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Definition
The ability of a body to do work due to its motion or its position/state of being. TE = KE + PE |
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Term
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Definition
The ability of a body to do work due to its position or state of being. PE = weight * height = m*g*h |
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Term
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Definition
The ability of a body to do work due to its motion. KE = 1/2 * m*V^2 |
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Term
Explain Newton's Law of Equilibrium |
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Definition
First law: a body at rest tends to stay at rest and a body in motion tends to stay in motion in a straight line at a constant velocity unless acted upon by some unbalanced force. Principle is called inertia |
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Term
State requirements for airplane to be in equilibrium flight |
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Definition
The sum of all forces and all moments around the airplane's center of gravity must equal zero. |
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Term
State requirements for an airplane to be in trimmed flight |
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Definition
The sum of all moments around the airplane's center of gravity must equal zero |
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Term
Explain Newton's Law of Acceleration |
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Definition
A force applied to a mass tends to produce an acceleration in the direction of the force, directly proportional to the magnitude of the force and inversely proportional to the mass of the object. a = F / m |
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Term
Explain Newton's Law of Interaction |
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Definition
For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction; the forces of two bodies on each other are always equal and are directed in opposite directions. Demonstrated when rearward force from a propeller's propwash causes an aircraft to thrust forward at an equal amount of force. |
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Term
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Definition
The pressure particles of air exert on adjacent bodies. Ambient static pressure is equal to the weight of a column of air on a given area |
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Term
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Definition
The total mass of air particles per unit volume |
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Term
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Definition
A measure of the average random kinetic energy of air particles |
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Term
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Definition
The rate at which air temperature decreases linearly as altitude changes. Average lapse rate for standard conditions are 2°C or 3.57°F per 1000' altitude increase |
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Term
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Definition
The amount of water vapor in the air |
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Term
Describe relationship between humidity and air density |
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Definition
As humidity increases, air density decreases, as water molecules push away air particles |
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Term
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Definition
The resistance of a fluid to flow or shearing |
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Term
Describe relationship between temperature and viscosity |
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Definition
For air, as temperature increases, viscosity increases. In liquids, as temperature increases, viscosity decreases. |
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Term
Define local speed of sound |
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Definition
The speed that a sound wave travels through air for a given set of conditions |
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Term
Describe the relationship between temperature and local speed of sound |
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Definition
As temperature increases, LSoS increases due to the fact that the air particles are more excited and can execute the wave motion faster. |
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Term
State the values for standard sea level pressure |
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Definition
29.92 inHg or 1013.25 mbar |
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Term
State the values for standard temperature |
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Definition
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Term
State the values for standard average lapse rate |
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Definition
2°C or 3.57°F per 1,000 feet altitude increase |
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Term
State the values for standard ρ0 (air density) |
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Definition
0.0024 slugs/ft^3 or 1.225 g/L |
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Term
State the values for standard local speed of sound |
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Definition
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Term
Describe the general gas law |
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Definition
P = ρ*R*T where P is pressure, ρ is density, R is the gas constant and T is temperature |
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Term
Explain Bernoulli's equation |
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Definition
H = Ps + q. H = total pressure, Ps = static pressure and q = dynamic pressure = 1/2 * ρ * V^2 |
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Term
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Definition
For any given point over time in a streamline, there is a constant velocity, pressure, temperature and density |
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Term
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Definition
the path that air particles follow in steady airflow |
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Term
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Definition
a collection of adjacent streamlines |
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Term
Explain continuity equation |
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Definition
A1 * V1 = A2 * V2. Disregarding compressibility, amount of mass flowing through one end of a streamtube must match the other end, regardless of area. |
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Term
Define indicated altitude |
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Definition
The altitude shown on an altimeter (static pressure corrected for Kollsman window setting) |
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Term
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Definition
The actual height above ground |
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Term
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Definition
The actual height over a standard reference level, the average sea level value |
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Term
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Definition
The height over a standard datum plane, where pressure would be equal to 29.92 (IA corrected for instrument error and density) |
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Term
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Definition
Pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature deviation. Not used as an actual height, but as a measure of aircraft performance. High Da = low performance, low air density |
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Term
Describe the Pitot-Static system |
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Definition
Pitot tube which measures ram air pressure at v=0 so total pressure, and static port on the side which measures static pressure. |
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Term
Define indicated airspeed |
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Definition
the airspeed shown on an airspeed indicator (measured from pitot-static system) |
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Term
Define calibrated airspeed |
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Definition
Indicated airspeed corrected for installation/instrument error |
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Term
Define equivalent airspeed |
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Definition
True airspeed at sea level on a standard day; calibrated airspeed corrected for compressibility error |
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Term
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Definition
The actual speed through the air; equivalent airspeed corrected for air density |
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Term
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Definition
The actual speed over ground. TAS corrected for headwind/tailwind component |
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Term
Describe factors affecting indicated airspeed |
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Definition
Literally just dynamic pressure converted to speed. Could have installation or position errors affecting accuracy. Also an instrument blockage could render this useless |
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Term
Describe factors affecting calibrated airspeed |
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Definition
Compressibility of air approaching speed of sound can cause this to be inaccurate |
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Term
Describe factors affecting calibrated airspeed |
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Definition
air density variation from standard conditions (temperature and pressure) can affect this value; it is based on the reference plane. |
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Term
Describe factors affecting true airspeed |
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Definition
a headwind/tailwind could be pushing or pulling you |
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Term
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Definition
any device used to ascend and move through air. Includes dirigibles, lighter than air, airplanes, rotorcraft, etc. |
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Term
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Definition
Heavier than air, engine-propelled, creates lift by dynamic reaction of air moving over its surfaces |
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Term
List the five components of an airplane |
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Definition
Fuselage, wings, engine, empennage, landing gear |
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Term
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Definition
The main structure of the airplane; all other components are attached to this. Carries persons and cargo. Can be manufactured using truss, semi-monocoque or monocoque construction |
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Term
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Definition
airfoil that forces air up and over it. Attached to the fuselage, may be one of three types of camber, and contains ailerons and may have flaps/slats/slots to change camber and airflow. May be semi-cantilever or full cantilever construction. |
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Term
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Definition
Either jet engine or prop engine; attached to the fuselage. Generates thrust that is used to push the airplane through the air |
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Term
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Definition
Consists of a horizontal and vertical stabilizer. Rudder attached to vertical stabilizer, elevator attached to horizontal stabilizer. Might contain trim aid devices. Attached to the fuselage. |
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Term
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Definition
Absorbs the shock and allows for ground roll on takeoff/landing. Also used for taxiing/ground operations. Nose wheel may be steerable with the rudder pedals. May be conventional (tailwheel) or tricycle (nose wheel) configuration and may be fixed or retractable. |
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Term
State the advantages of semi-monocoque fuselage construction |
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Definition
Balance between weight and strength; easier to fix than monocoque and lighter than truss type. |
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Term
Describe full cantilever wing construction |
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Definition
All bracing and support is inside the wings; attached to fuselage only at wing root. |
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Term
Describe the airplane three-axis reference system |
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Definition
Vertical axis goes through CG; Longitudinal axis goes from nose to tail of airplane; Lateral axis extends wingtip-to-wingtip. |
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Term
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Definition
an infinite line extending from leading edge to trailing edge of a wing |
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Term
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Definition
a measurement at one point of the wing along the chord line from leading edge to trailing edge |
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Term
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Definition
The length of the chord at the base of the wing |
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Term
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Definition
the length of the cord measured at the wingtip |
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Term
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Definition
the mean of all chords along the airplane's chord line. used for calculating surface area, ratios, etc. |
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Term
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Definition
a line drawn equidistant from the top and bottom surfaces of the wing from leading edge to trailing edge. |
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Term
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Definition
An airfoil that produces zero net lift at a zero angle of attack. MCL = chord line |
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Term
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Definition
An airfoil that produces positive net lift at zero angle of attack. MCL > chord line |
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Term
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Definition
An airfoil that produces negative net lift at zero angle of attack. MCL < chord line |
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Term
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Definition
airflow parallel to the leading edge; generally from wing root toward wingtip. Does not generate lift. |
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Term
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Definition
airflow perpendicular to the leading edge, generates lift |
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Term
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Definition
The angle between the longitudinal axis and the horizon |
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Term
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Definition
the actual path that the CG experiences while moving through the air |
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Term
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Definition
The airflow the airplane experiences as it moves through the air. Equal and opposite in magnitude/direction to flight path |
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Term
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Definition
The angle between chord line and relative wind |
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Term
Define angle of incidence |
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Definition
The angle between chord line and longitudinal axis of airplane |
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Term
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Definition
Angle between lateral axis and the upward inclination of the wings |
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Term
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Definition
the length from wingtip to wingtip |
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Term
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Definition
The total area of the wing including the portion over/in the fuselage. Wingspan * average chord |
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Term
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Definition
Ratio of weight to surface area WL = W / S |
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Term
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Definition
the ratio of chord of airfoil from root to tip: ƛ = cT / cR |
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Term
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Definition
angle between line drawn 25% from leading edge of wing to lateral axis |
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Term
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Definition
ratio of wingspan to average chord AR = b / c |
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Term
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Definition
Point at which all weight is experienced, considered to be concentrated |
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Term
Define aerodynamic center |
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Definition
Point at which all changes in aerodynamic force appear to act from |
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Term
Describe motions that occur around airplane CG |
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Definition
yaw about vertical axis, pitch about lateral axis and roll about longitudinal axis |
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Term
Explain aerodynamic relationship of four primary forces of equilibrium flight |
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Definition
Lift tends to counter weight but can also add to drag. Thrust generally counters drag but can also counter weight when climbing. To have equilibrium flight, the forces must cancel out and also not create any net moment. |
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Term
Describe how the four primary aerodynamic forces affect each other |
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Definition
Drag counters thrust. Weight generally is opposed to lift. |
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Term
State pressure distribution around an airfoil |
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Definition
Static pressure is lower above an airfoil when creating lift, and opposite for negative lift. Increasing AoA increases pressure differential between lower and upper surfaces until reaching CLMax AoA. |
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Term
Define lift component of aerodynamic force |
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Definition
Always perpendicular to the relative wind. Can be directly counter to weight as in level equilibrium flight, but often has a rearward component. |
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Term
Describe how factors in the lift equation affect lift production |
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Definition
L = 1/2 * ρ * V^2 * S CL, and CL is affected by compressibility, aspect ratio, viscosity, Angle of Attack, and camber |
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Term
List factors affecting coefficient of lift that pilot can directly control |
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Definition
Only angle of attack and camber |
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Term
Define drag component of aerodynamic force |
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Definition
Always parallel to relative wind and in same direction. D = 1/2 * ρ * V^2 *S * CD. Consists of parasite and induced drag components. |
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Term
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Definition
Drag not associated with the production of lift. Includes form, friction and interference drag |
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Term
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Definition
Caused by the separation of air and turbulent low-pressure wake behind the object. |
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Term
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Definition
Caused by rough surfaces causing turbulent/adhering motion of wind, delayed separation |
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Term
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Definition
Caused by airflow around two different parts intersecting |
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Term
Describe measures to reduce form drag |
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Definition
Streamlining causes less wake behind the surface |
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Term
Describe measures to reduce friction drag |
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Definition
painting, sanding, overall making surface smoother |
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Term
Describe measures to reduce interference drag |
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Definition
Proper filleting and fairing ensures smooth meeting of airflow and less interference drag. |
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Term
State effects of upwash and downwash on infinite wing |
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Definition
upwash moves lift component forward, increases AoA. Downwash is equal and opposite and moves lift component rearward, reducing AoA. |
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Term
State effects of upwash and downwash on finite wing |
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Definition
same as infinite, but downwash is about twice as strong. This causes lift component to be slightly rearward due to span wise flow over the wingtip contributing to excess downwash moving AoA to be smaller. |
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Term
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Definition
rearward component of lift in the direction of relative wind |
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Term
Define cause of induced drag on a finite wing |
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Definition
spanwise flow over the wingtip contributes to increased downwash. This reduces the AoA and thus pushes lift component rearward. |
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Term
Describe factors affecting induced drag |
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Definition
Di = k*L^2 (or W^2) / ρ * V^2 * b^2 b = wingspan, L = lift, W = weight, k is a constant |
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Term
State when an airplane will enter ground effect |
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Definition
Within 1 wingspan of the ground |
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Term
Describe effects of AoA changes on CL and CD |
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Definition
increasing AoA increases both CL and CD until reaching CLMax, then it only increases CD |
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Term
Explain lift to drag ratio using lift and drag equations |
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Definition
L and D equations cancel out to be CL/CD. This ratio defines the efficiency of the airplane with relation to velocity and angle of attack |
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Term
Explain importance of L/DMax |
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Definition
Most efficient speed/AoA to fly airplane |
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Term
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Definition
Induced plus parasite drag. All forces that act in same direction as relative wind. |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in velocity on total drag |
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Definition
Increased velocity increases total drag by squared factor |
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Term
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Definition
The amount of thrust required to fly the airplane at a given airspeed/AoA |
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Term
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Definition
The amount of thrust at given throttle, density for a given airspeed/AoA |
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Term
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Definition
The amount of power required to fly airplane at an airspeed/AoA |
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Term
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Definition
Power at given throttle/PCL and density for given airspeed/AoA |
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Term
Describe effects of throttle setting on thrust available and power available |
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Definition
For a plane, TA increases with throttle increase. So does PA |
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Term
Describe effects of velocity on TA and PA |
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Definition
For prop, TA decreases as AS increases. for Jets it remains constant |
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Term
Describe effects of density on TA and PA |
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Definition
both TA and PA increase with increased density. |
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Term
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Definition
Actual power produced by engine to turn shaft |
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Term
Define propeller efficiency |
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Definition
The percentage of power converted into thrust by a prop engine. |
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Term
State max rated shaft HP in T-6B |
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Definition
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Term
Explain how prop efficiency affects thrust horsepower |
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Definition
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Term
Describe power required in terms of thrust required |
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Definition
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Term
State location of L/DMax on TR curves |
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Definition
At the lowest point of the TR curve |
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Term
State location of L/DMax on PR curves |
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Definition
To the right of the bottom; at the same velocity and AoA as on the TR curve |
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Term
Describe how thrust required varies with velocity |
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Definition
It decreases to point of L/DMax and then increases |
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Term
Describe how power required varies with velocity |
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Definition
It decreases as induced drag decreases but then increases with increase of velocity and increase of parasite drag |
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Term
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Definition
the difference between thrust available and thrust required for a given velocity, throttle setting and density |
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Term
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Definition
difference between power available and power required for given velocity, throttle setting and air density |
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Term
Describe effects of excess thrust and excess power |
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Definition
Will cause airplane to either accelerate or climb depending on AoA |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in weight on thrust required |
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Definition
moves curve up and to right; more TR and velocity required |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in weight on power required |
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Definition
moves curve up and to right |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in weight on excess thrust |
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Definition
decreases Te at all locations |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in weight on excess power |
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Definition
decreases Pe at all locations |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in altitude on thrust required |
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Definition
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Term
describe effects of changes in altitude on power required |
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Definition
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Term
describe effects of changes in altitude on thrust excess |
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Definition
decreases for prop airplane, not for jet |
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Term
Describe effects of changes in altitude on power excess |
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Definition
decreases power excess for every setting |
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Term
Describe effects of configuration changes on thrust required |
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Definition
moves curve up for gear, up and left for flaps, up and right for weight |
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Term
Describe effects of configuration changes on power required |
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Definition
moves curve up for gear, up and left for flaps, up and right for weight |
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Term
Describe effects of configuration changes on thrust excess |
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Definition
decrease excess thrust in general |
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Term
Describe effects of configuration changes on power excess |
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Definition
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Term
Describe aerodynamic effects of raising or lowering flaps |
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Definition
lowering increases lift but also increases drag. allows you to fly at a slower airspeed for a given AoA. changes wing to be positively cambered |
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Term
Describe aerodynamic effects of raising and lowering landing gear |
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Definition
Increases parasitic drag. Requires more thrust for given AoA/Airspeed |
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Term
Explain aerodynamic effects of ailerons on aircraft |
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Definition
Ailerons move in opposite direction from each other. Causes more positive lift to be generated on one side and produces roll. |
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Term
Explain aerodynamic effects of elevator on aircraft |
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Definition
Causes air to either push up or down the tail and affect the nose opposite. |
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Term
Explain aerodynamic effects of rudder on aircraft |
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Definition
creates pressure differential on sides of rudder and produces yawing motion. used for coordinated flight. |
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Term
Describe how trim tab system holds an airplane in trimmed flight |
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Definition
move it opposite of the direction the control surface moves to produce a moment on that control surface. Will tend to hold it in place. |
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Term
Define aerodynamic balancing |
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Definition
Used to keep control pressures associated with higher velocities within reasonable limits. shaping airfoil in order to balance aerodynamic forces |
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Term
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Definition
Affecting stability of control surfaces using weights/design to move CG |
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Term
State methods for aerodynamic balancing employed on T-6B |
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Definition
Shielded horn in elevator, Overhang in ailerons, shielded horn in rudder |
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Term
State methods for mass balancing employed on T-6B |
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Definition
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Term
List three types of control systems |
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Definition
Conventional, power-boosted and full-power (fly-by-wire) |
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Term
State characteristics of conventional control system |
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Definition
motion of stick/rudder pedals directly move control surfaces. provides direct feedback with aerodynamic forces/changes |
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Term
State characteristics of power-boosted control system |
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Definition
Hydraulic, pneumatic or electric power boost. Some feedback, not as much as conventional |
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Term
State characteristics of fly-by-wire control system |
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Definition
Full-power systems provide no direct feedback and is completely controlled by electric systems. Can use artificial feedback. |
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Term
State how trim tabs can be used to generate artificial feel on a control surface |
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Definition
Servo trim tabs make it easier, moving opposite. Anti-servo trim tabs move with, making it more difficult. |
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Term
Describe purpose of bobweights and downsprings |
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Definition
downsprings make it more difficult to pull stick aft at slow speeds, and bobweights make it more difficult in maneuvering flight. for artificial feel. |
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