Definition
A flight condition in which the airplane's speed, altitude, heading, and attitude remain constant over time, with all forces acting on the aircraft (lift, weight, thrust, and drag) in balance and no net acceleration in any direction.
Plain English
The airplane is flying in a settled, unchanging way — same speed, same altitude, same direction — with nothing speeding up, slowing down, climbing, or turning.
Context Anchor
Seen in straight-and-level flight when discussing how the airplane settles after the pilot sets power and holds the controls in a stable position.
Derivation
‘Steady’ means unchanging; ‘state’ refers to the condition the airplane is in. A steady state is simply a condition that isn't changing. The phrase signals that everything about the flight — speed, altitude, heading — is holding still in time.
Why Pilots Care
Aircraft performance charts and handling predictions are valid only when these conditions exist; any acceleration invalidates the numbers.
Grounding Statement
If the airspeed, altitude, and direction have stopped changing after a control or power adjustment, the airplane is in steady-state flight conditions.
Intuition Check
Steady-state does not mean the airplane is motionless or perfectly still. It means the airplane is moving through the air in a condition that is no longer changing overall.
Example Sentence 1
Once established in cruise at 4,500 feet, the pilot trimmed the airplane and settled into steady-state flight conditions.
Example Sentence 2
The instructor asked the student to maintain steady-state flight conditions while making small heading corrections with coordinated aileron and rudder.