Definition
The study of how the four forces acting on an aircraft — lift, weight, thrust, and drag — interact during actual flight to produce and control motion through the air. It covers how these forces behave in straight-and-level flight, climbs, descents, turns, and changes in airspeed or configuration, and how the pilot manipulates controls to keep them in the desired balance.
Plain English
It is the practical side of how an aeroplane flies. It looks at the push, pull, lift, and drag working on the aircraft once it is in the air, and how those forces change when the pilot climbs, descends, turns, or changes speed.
Context Anchor
Seen in the Pilot’s Handbook chapter that explains the forces acting on an airplane after it leaves the ground.
Derivation
From the Greek 'aer' meaning air, and 'dynamis' meaning power or force. Aerodynamics is literally the study of forces acting in air. The phrase 'in flight' narrows the topic from theory to what actually happens once the aircraft has left the ground.
Why Pilots Care
A working grasp of these forces lets a pilot anticipate how the aircraft will respond to control inputs, weight changes, and wind, directly affecting safety and efficiency.
Grounding Statement
When an airplane moves through the air, the air pushes and flows around it in ways that directly affect how the airplane flies.
Intuition Check
Aerodynamics in Flight is not just classroom theory. It describes the real air forces acting on the airplane every moment it is flying.
Example Sentence 1
Chapter 5 of the Pilot's Handbook covers aerodynamics in flight, showing how lift and drag change as the aircraft climbs.
Example Sentence 2
Understanding aerodynamics in flight helps a pilot choose the correct flap setting for a short-field takeoff.