Definition
A condition in which the density altitude is lower than the actual physical altitude, meaning the air is denser than the standard atmosphere predicts for that elevation. It typically occurs in cold temperatures, low elevations, low humidity, or high atmospheric pressure. Denser air improves aircraft performance: engines produce more power, propellers and wings generate more thrust and lift, and takeoff and climb performance improve.
Plain English
The air is thicker than usual for the altitude you're at, so the aircraft performs better than it would on a standard day.
Context Anchor
Seen in takeoff, climb, and performance planning, especially when comparing how an aircraft will perform on cool days versus hot days.
Derivation
Density comes from a Latin word meaning “thick” or “closely packed.” Altitude comes from a Latin word meaning “height.” Together, density altitude describes the height the airplane “feels” based on how thick or thin the air is, not just how high the airport is.
Why Pilots Care
Aircraft performance improves: shorter takeoff roll, better climb rate, and higher service ceiling compared to high density altitude conditions.
Grounding Statement
On a cool, high-pressure morning, the airplane may accelerate and climb better because the air is denser.
Intuition Check
Low density altitude does not simply mean the airport is at a low elevation. It means the airplane is performing as though it is in lower, denser air.
Example Sentence 1
On a cold morning at a sea-level airport, the low density altitude meant the aircraft lifted off well before the usual point on the runway.
Example Sentence 2
Check density altitude before departure; a low value means you can safely use a shorter runway.