Definition
A descent path to the runway that is noticeably steeper than the standard glidepath (typically steeper than the usual 3-degree approach). It is used to clear obstacles near the approach end of the runway or to land on a short field where a normal-angle approach would result in touching down too far past the threshold.
Plain English
Coming down to the runway at a sharper angle than usual, so the airplane drops more height in less forward distance.
Context Anchor
Used when discussing landing approaches, especially when the pilot must clear obstacles or land in a shorter area.
Derivation
Steep originally meant sharply rising or falling. Approach means coming near. Together, the phrase points to the sharp downward path an airplane follows as it comes near the runway.
Why Pilots Care
Allows landing in shorter fields or over obstacles but requires precise airspeed and configuration control to avoid hard landings or stalls.
Intuition Check
Do not read steep approach angle as simply “going fast toward the runway.” It means the downward path is sharper than normal, regardless of whether the airplane’s airspeed is correct.
Example Sentence 1
With trees off the approach end, the pilot flew a steep approach angle to clear them and still touch down near the threshold.
Example Sentence 2
During the short-field landing practice, a steeper approach angle helped the airplane land within the first third of the runway.