Definition
The principle that air density changes inversely with temperature when pressure is held constant: as air temperature rises, the air molecules spread out and density decreases; as air temperature falls, the molecules pack closer together and density increases. Higher temperatures therefore reduce aircraft performance because the wing, propeller, and engine all rely on dense air.
Plain English
Hot air is thinner and cold air is thicker. The hotter it gets, the fewer air molecules occupy the same space, and that thinner air gives the aircraft less to work with.
Context Anchor
Seen in aircraft performance discussions, especially when comparing takeoff, climb, and landing performance on hot versus cool days.
Derivation
Temperature comes from a Latin word meaning a proper mixing or condition. Density comes from the Latin densus, meaning thick or close-packed. That helps here because temperature changes how closely packed the air is.
Why Pilots Care
It directly increases takeoff distance, reduces climb rate, and lowers service ceiling on hot days.
Analogy
Think of people in a room. If everyone spreads out, fewer people fit in one small area; if everyone packs closer together, more people fit in that same area. Warm air is more spread out, and cool air is more packed together.
Grounding Statement
Picture the same room full of air on a freezing morning versus a hot afternoon -- the hot-afternoon air contains fewer molecules in the same volume, and that is the air the wings and propeller have to work with.
Intuition Check
Do not assume hotter air helps the airplane because heat sounds like more energy. For aircraft performance, hotter air usually means thinner air, and thinner air usually means less performance.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor reminded the student that the effect of temperature on density would lengthen their takeoff roll noticeably on the 95-degree afternoon.
Example Sentence 2
We calculated takeoff performance carefully because the effect of temperature on density was significant that day.