Definition
An unintended flight condition in which the aircraft's pitch attitude is below the horizon to a degree not appropriate for normal flight, typically accompanied by increasing airspeed, increasing rate of descent, and often a bank angle. Recognized on the attitude indicator by the miniature aircraft appearing well below the horizon line. Standard recovery is to reduce power, level the wings, and smoothly raise the nose to the horizon, then return to normal flight.
Plain English
The aircraft has ended up pointed down more than it should be, usually with the speed building and the aircraft losing altitude fast. The pilot didn't put it there on purpose and needs to recover quickly using a set procedure.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument flying and unusual attitude recovery training, especially when the pilot must rely on instruments instead of outside visual references.
Derivation
In aviation, attitude means the aircraft’s position compared with the horizon, not a person’s mood. Unusual attitude means an aircraft position that is not normal for the flight being made, and nose-low tells which way the aircraft is displaced: the nose is too low.
Why Pilots Care
Incorrect recovery can produce dangerously high speeds, airframe stress, or an inadvertent spin.
Grounding Statement
If the instruments show the nose below the horizon and the airspeed increasing, picture the airplane starting downhill and needing a controlled return to level flight.
Intuition Check
Do not read attitude as emotion or mindset here. In this context, attitude means the airplane’s position compared with the horizon, and nose-low means the nose is pointed too far downward.
Example Sentence 1
After becoming disoriented in cloud, the pilot glanced at the attitude indicator and recognized a nose-low unusual attitude with airspeed climbing through the yellow arc.
Example Sentence 2
Seeing the nose below the horizon on the attitude indicator, the pilot applied back pressure and reduced power to return to level flight.