Definition
Irregular, unsteady movements of the air caused by variations in wind speed, wind direction, surface heating, or obstructions to airflow. These currents produce sudden changes in lift and aircraft attitude, especially near the ground during takeoff and landing.
Plain English
Air that is moving in uneven, choppy, unpredictable ways rather than flowing smoothly. When an airplane flies through it, the aircraft can be bumped, lifted, dropped, or pushed sideways without warning.
Context Anchor
Encountered during takeoff, liftoff, landing, and flight near terrain, buildings, trees, or changing weather where the air may not be smooth.
Derivation
‘Turbulent’ comes from the Latin turbulentus, meaning ‘restless’ or ‘stirred up,’ from turba (‘a crowd, commotion’). The image is of air that is agitated and disordered rather than flowing calmly — which is exactly what the pilot feels through the controls.
Why Pilots Care
Turbulent air can cause sudden uncommanded pitch, roll, or yaw right after liftoff, requiring prompt control corrections to stay on the desired flight path.
Analogy
Turbulent air currents are like uneven water under a small boat. The boat can still move forward, but it may rise, drop, or rock as it crosses disturbed patches.
Grounding Statement
Just after liftoff, the airplane may pass through uneven moving air and briefly feel as if it is being bumped or shifted before it settles back into smoother flight.
Intuition Check
Turbulent air currents do not simply mean strong wind. They mean air moving unevenly and changing direction or speed over short distances.
Example Sentence 1
On the hot afternoon takeoff, turbulent air currents rolling off the hangars caused the right wing to drop just after liftoff, and the pilot corrected with aileron.
Example Sentence 2
The pilot chose a different departure route to avoid the turbulent air currents created by wind flowing over nearby hills.