Definition
A fixed set of atmospheric reference values used as a baseline for aircraft performance calculations: a sea-level pressure of 29.92 inches of mercury (1013.2 hPa), a sea-level temperature of 15 degrees Celsius (59 degrees Fahrenheit), and a standard rate of temperature decrease with altitude (approximately 2 degrees Celsius per 1,000 feet). These values define the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) used in performance charts and flight planning.
Plain English
An agreed-upon 'average' set of weather conditions — a specific pressure and temperature at sea level — that performance charts assume so pilots have a consistent starting point for calculating things like takeoff distance and climb rate.
Context Anchor
Seen in aircraft performance data, especially when using charts for takeoff distance, climb, landing distance, and engine performance.
Derivation
Standard' comes from Old French estandart, meaning a fixed point or reference banner. In aviation, it signals that these are agreed-upon reference values — not what the weather actually is on any given day, but the baseline everything is measured against.
Why Pilots Care
Provides a common reference point so performance numbers in the aircraft manual can be compared consistently no matter what the actual weather is.
Analogy
It is like using a zero mark on a ruler. The standard condition gives everyone the same starting point, and then pilots adjust for how the real day differs.
Grounding Statement
On a standard day at sea level, the air is 59 °F and the altimeter setting would be 29.92 inches of mercury.
Intuition Check
“Standard” does not mean the weather is typical, safe, or what you should expect today. Here it means an agreed reference used to compare aircraft performance.
Example Sentence 1
The takeoff distance chart in the POH assumes standard atmospheric conditions, so on a hot summer day the actual roll will be longer.
Example Sentence 2
When actual conditions differ from standard atmospheric conditions the airplane needs more runway to lift off.