Definition
Cockpit instruments that display the aircraft's heading using a spinning gyroscope as a stable reference. Because the gyro resists changes to its spin axis, it holds a fixed direction in space while the aircraft turns around it, allowing the instrument to show heading smoothly and without the swinging or lag of a magnetic compass. These instruments are not north-seeking and must be periodically aligned to the magnetic compass during straight-and-level, unaccelerated flight.
Plain English
An instrument that shows which way the aircraft is pointing, using a fast-spinning wheel inside it to keep a steady reference. Because it doesn't find north on its own, the pilot has to set it to match the magnetic compass from time to time.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument flying when learning how the heading indicator works and how to keep it aligned with the magnetic compass.
Derivation
Gyroscopic comes from the Greek gyros (circle, ring) and skopein (to look at or observe) -- literally a 'circle viewer.' The name reflects the spinning wheel inside, whose rotation provides the steady reference the instrument uses to track heading.
Why Pilots Care
It supplies a stable heading reference free from the acceleration and turning errors that affect the magnetic compass, supporting accurate navigation in instrument conditions.
Analogy
A spinning top tends to keep pointing the same way while it spins. A gyroscopic heading indicator uses that same basic idea to give the pilot a steadier direction reference.
Intuition Check
Do not read heading as the airplane’s exact path over the ground. Here, heading means the direction the aircraft’s nose is pointed; wind can make the actual path different.
Example Sentence 1
Before taxi, the pilot aligned the gyroscopic heading indicator with the magnetic compass so it would read correctly during the flight.
Example Sentence 2
After the standard-rate turn, the gyroscopic heading indicator showed the new course without the lag seen on the wet compass.