Definition
Changes in the airplane's groundspeed caused by wind acting along the line of flight. A headwind component reduces groundspeed; a tailwind component increases it. The airspeed shown on the airspeed indicator does not change from wind alone — only the speed of the airplane over the ground changes.
Plain English
How fast you move across the ground gets faster or slower depending on whether the wind is helping you or holding you back. Your speed through the air stays the same; your speed over the ground does not.
Context Anchor
Seen when learning how wind affects the airplane’s path over the ground during ground reference maneuvers and turns near the surface.
Derivation
Velocity comes from the Latin word velox, meaning “swift.” Variation comes from Latin words meaning “to change.” Together, the words point to changing motion, not just changing speed.
Why Pilots Care
Uncorrected velocity variations cause the aircraft to drift from the planned ground track, increasing the risk of navigation errors or airspace violations.
Grounding Statement
On a windy day, the same airplane can move quickly across the ground in one direction and much more slowly after turning into the wind.
Intuition Check
Do not read velocity as only speed. In aviation and physics, velocity includes direction, so a velocity variation can be a change in speed, direction, or both.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor pointed out the velocity variations during the rectangular course: faster groundspeed on the downwind leg and slower on the upwind leg, even though airspeed stayed constant.
Example Sentence 2
During the cross-country leg, velocity variations from a passing front required frequent small heading changes to hold the desired ground track.