Definition
An aircraft attitude in which the nose is pitched below the horizon, indicating the longitudinal axis is angled downward relative to level flight. On the attitude indicator, this appears as the miniature aircraft symbol sitting below the artificial horizon line.
Plain English
The aircraft's nose is pointing downward compared to where the horizon sits. Left uncorrected, this typically results in the aircraft descending and gaining airspeed.
Context Anchor
Used during pitch-control discussions in straight-and-level flight, especially when a pilot is using instruments instead of outside visual cues.
Why Pilots Care
Uncorrected nose-low attitudes cause altitude loss, airspeed buildup, and potential loss of control during instrument flight.
Grounding Statement
A nose-low airplane is beginning to point downhill relative to the flight path the pilot wants.
Intuition Check
Do not read nose low as a casual description of where the airplane’s front looks from outside. In this context, it means the aircraft’s pitch is below the reference needed for the intended flight condition.
Example Sentence 1
Cross-checking the attitude indicator, the pilot noticed a slight nose-low attitude and applied gentle back pressure to return to level flight.
Example Sentence 2
During instrument practice, a nose-low indication on the attitude indicator prompted immediate back pressure to regain straight-and-level flight.