Definition
An object whose shape is designed to allow air (or another fluid) to flow around it smoothly, with minimal turbulence and drag. A streamlined shape typically tapers from a rounded leading edge to a narrow trailing edge, allowing the airflow to follow the surface and rejoin cleanly behind it.
Plain English
A shape that lets air slip past it easily instead of fighting against it. Think of a smooth, tapered form that air can flow around without breaking up into messy swirls.
Context Anchor
Seen in basic aerodynamics when explaining how air moves around a wing or other aircraft part.
Derivation
From 'streamline' — the path a single particle of air follows as it flows past an object. An object is 'streamlined' when its shape lets those flow lines stay smooth and orderly instead of breaking into turbulence.
Why Pilots Care
Streamlined shaping on wings, fuselages, and fairings reduces parasite drag, improving climb performance, cruise speed, and fuel efficiency.
Analogy
Compare a teardrop falling through the air to a brick. The teardrop slips through cleanly; the brick shoves the air aside and leaves a churning wake. A streamlined object behaves like the teardrop.
Grounding Statement
Picture air meeting a smooth wing shape and flowing around it in orderly paths instead of breaking into rough swirls behind it.
Intuition Check
Streamlined does not just mean sleek-looking or modern. Here it means shaped to keep airflow smooth and reduce resistance through the air.
Example Sentence 1
The wing is a streamlined object, which is why air flows over it cleanly enough to produce lift instead of breaking into turbulence.
Example Sentence 2
Engine cowlings are streamlined objects to reduce parasite drag during cruise.