Definition
A coupled lateral-directional oscillation of an aircraft, commonly known as Dutch roll, in which the aircraft yaws and rolls back and forth around its vertical and longitudinal axes at the same time. It typically occurs in aircraft with strong lateral stability (resistance to rolling) relative to their directional stability (resistance to yawing), producing a rhythmic wagging and rocking motion that, if undamped, can persist or grow.
Plain English
It is a wobble where the nose swings side to side while the wings rock in time with it. The aircraft is doing two things at once -- yawing and rolling -- in a repeating rhythm rather than settling down on its own.
Context Anchor
Seen in aircraft stability discussions, especially when studying Dutch roll and how an airplane responds after a gust, control input, or other disturbance.
Derivation
Free here means the motion is left to itself, with no pilot or autopilot input damping it out. Directional refers to motion around the vertical axis (yaw). Oscillation means a back-and-forth repeating motion. Together: a self-sustaining yaw-and-roll wobble that the aircraft does on its own once disturbed.
Why Pilots Care
When left undamped it increases workload, reduces comfort, and can become a safety concern in certain aircraft.
Grounding Statement
Picture a gust nudging the airplane, then the nose starts swinging left and right while the airplane tries to settle back down.
Intuition Check
“Free” does not mean the motion is harmless or uncontrolled forever. Here it means the airplane is moving on its own after a disturbance, not because the pilot keeps commanding it.
Example Sentence 1
After the yaw damper failed, the crew noticed a slow free directional oscillation building up in cruise and reduced speed to make it easier to manage.
Example Sentence 2
The handbook explains that inadequate directional stability allows free directional oscillation to persist.