Definition
An electrical charge that builds up on the surface of an object when it gains or loses electrons, typically through friction or contact with another material. The charge remains on the surface until it is discharged, often as a small spark when the object touches something at a different electrical potential.
Plain English
An electrical charge that collects on the surface of something through rubbing or contact, and stays there until it jumps off to another object — usually as a small spark or crackle.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument flying discussions of precipitation static, especially when flying through rain, snow, ice crystals, dust, or volcanic ash.
Derivation
‘Static’ comes from the Greek statikos, meaning ‘standing still.’ It points to the key idea: the charge is sitting on the surface, not flowing through a circuit like normal current electricity.
Why Pilots Care
Uncontrolled discharge can blank out VHF and navigation radios, reducing situational awareness in IMC.
Analogy
It is like the small shock you may feel after walking across carpet and touching a doorknob. The charge was building up quietly, then released when it found a path to leave.
Grounding Statement
Picture an aircraft moving through snow or rain and collecting tiny electrical charges until the radios begin to crackle.
Intuition Check
Static electricity is not just “static” as in radio noise. The noise is the symptom; the electrical charge buildup is the cause.
Example Sentence 1
Static electricity built up on the wings during the flight through heavy snow, causing crackling noise on the VHF radio.
Example Sentence 2
Static wicks help dissipate static electricity before it can disrupt navigation receivers.