Definition
The pilot input that lowers the airplane's nose by moving the elevator (or stabilator) so the tail produces more lift, rotating the aircraft nose-down about its lateral axis. In a stall, applying nose-down pitch control reduces the wing's angle of attack below the critical angle, allowing the wing to produce lift again.
Plain English
Pushing the control wheel or stick forward to point the nose down. In a stall, this is the action that gets the wings flying again by reducing how steeply they meet the air.
Context Anchor
Encountered in stall recovery procedures, especially the first step of reducing the wing’s angle to the airflow after a stall indication.
Derivation
In aviation, pitch means the airplane’s nose-up or nose-down movement. Here, nose-down makes clear that the control action is in the direction that lowers the nose, not raises it.
Why Pilots Care
Correct pitch nose-down control breaks the stall promptly while minimizing altitude loss and avoiding a secondary stall or spin entry.
Grounding Statement
In a stall recovery, the airplane may need to point slightly lower before it can fly normally again.
Intuition Check
Do not assume stall recovery means pulling the nose up to avoid losing altitude. Pitch nose-down control means lowering the nose enough to recover the wing first.
Example Sentence 1
At the first indication of a stall, the pilot applied positive pitch nose-down control to reduce the angle of attack.
Example Sentence 2
Smooth pitch nose-down control during recovery prevents the airplane from stalling again.