Definition
The speed and direction at which the visual scene appears to move past the airplane during flight, particularly as perceived by the pilot looking outside the cockpit. Flow velocity increases with airspeed and decreases with height above the ground, and it is a primary visual cue pilots use to judge airplane movement, height, and closure with the runway during takeoff, approach, and landing.
Plain English
How fast the ground and surrounding scenery appear to stream past you as you fly. Close to the ground or moving fast, things rush by quickly. Higher up or moving slowly, things drift by gently.
Context Anchor
Used in visual flying and landing discussions when a pilot is judging airplane movement and height from outside visual cues.
Derivation
From 'flow' (continuous movement of something past a point) and 'velocity' (speed in a direction). Together it describes how the visual world flows past the pilot's eye, which is why the term is borrowed for this perceptual cue rather than referring to airflow itself.
Why Pilots Care
Directly determines lift produced by the wings and affects control effectiveness and aircraft performance.
Analogy
It is like riding in a car: roadside signs seem to rush past, while distant hills seem to move slowly. The airplane gives a similar visual effect, especially close to the ground.
Grounding Statement
Picture driving on a highway: the road surface near the car blurs past quickly, while distant hills barely move. The same thing happens looking out of an airplane, and pilots learn to read that flow to judge speed and height.
Intuition Check
Flow velocity does not mean wind speed or airspeed here. It means the apparent speed of the outside scene moving through the pilot’s view.
Example Sentence 1
As the airplane descended toward the runway, the increasing flow velocity told the pilot it was time to begin the flare.
Example Sentence 2
A drop in flow velocity during a turn reduced lift and caused a slight descent.