ASTB Aviation and Nautical Information Selection Study Guide
Engine
(jet or props) generates thrust
Steady Flight Condition
(not a force) neither accelerating, decelerating, climbing, nor diving; here the forces that oppose each other are also equal to each other
Airfoil
(wing) shape of a wing or prop blade
Bernoulli's Principle
As the velocity of a fluid (air) increases, its internal pressure decreases
Thrust
Forward force; provided by the engine; thrust equals drag in steady flight condition
Wingspan
Max distance from wingtip to wingtip
Navigation Lights
Red light on left wingtip, green light on right wingtip
Turn & Bank Indicator, Turn Coordinator, or Turn Indicator
Shows the direction of turn; and rate of turn; rate of direction of roll
Landing Gear
Structure that supports an aircraft on the ground and allows it to taxi; undercarriage
Drag
a backward retarding force made by air resistance
Headings
a hard surfaced runway is numbered by its magnetic heading (compass); so runway 22 has a magnetic heading of 220 degrees ) takeoff or landing); the opposite direction is about 40 degrees; so it would be runway 4 (takeoff or landing)
Rotary Wing
a helicopter blade or tilt rotor (osprey) etc.
Ground Speed
a measure of the aircraft's actual speed over the ground
Thwart
a strut placed crosswise (left/right) in a ship or boat, to brace it crosswise
Segmented Circle
a traffic guide for an airport; shows wind and directions to turn (L and backwards L for direction)
Center of Gravity
all changes in aircraft altitude occur about the center of gravity
Longitudinal Axis
also called roll axis; imaginary line from nose to tail through the aircraft's center of gravity; moment of bank or roll occurs around it
Canard
an air-frame configuration of fixed-wing aircraft in which the tail section is ahead of the main wing; instead of having your vertical and horizontal stabilizers you have a horizontal stabilizer around the cockpit; there are lifting canards and control canards depending on the plane.
Slow down
arms out flapping up and down
Attitude indicator
artificial horizon; tells orientation of the aircraft relative to the earth (pitch, bank, & yaw); works through a gyro
Fuselage
body of plane; holds things together, carriers payload/fuel
Light signals or Aldis Lamp Signals
can be used in the event of lost communication between control tower and pilot
Wake Turbulence
caused by the higher air pressure under a wing "escaping" in an outward direction from the wing tip to the lower-pressure air flowing above the wing, this "escaping air will swirl upward causing vertices (swerving air) known as wake turbulence
Flashing green
cleared for taxi/return for landing
Steady green (ground/air)
cleared to takeoff/land
Big X on Runway
closed runway
Windlass
designed primarly for handling an anchor chain
Heading indicator
displays the aircraft relative to North; a compass with the aircraft in it
Airspeed Indicator
displays the aircraft's airspeed; typically in knots
Delta Wing
doesn't seem to need a horizontal stabilizer since the wings stretch so far back
Weight/Gravity
downward force pulling the aircraft down towards the earth; weight equals lift in steady flight condition
Alternating Red and Green
exercise extreme caution
Equivalent Airspeed
found by correcting calibrated airspeed for compressibility error; useful for predicting aircraft heading, aerodynamic loads, stalling, etc.
Slats
front edge of wings; changes lift
Cockpit
front of place; command and control
Wings
generates lift
Emergency Stop
hands above head crossing back and forth
Insert Chocks
hands out coming to sides
Come Ahead
hands up waiving toward face
Aileron
hinged control surfaces attached to the trailing edge of the wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. The ailerons are used to control the aircraft in roll; turn plane in air
Horizontal Stabilizer
horizontal wing-like part of the tail; controls pitch (up and down)
Angle of Bank
how far the plane is turning; how much it's banking; if you bank too much you will stall because you always need enough lift to support weight
Lateral Axis
imaginary line from wing tip to wing tip; moment of pitch occurs about it
Mach 1
is the speed of sound for a given air density; (about): 1,116 ft/s, 340 m/s, 761 mph
Port
left side of the ship (if driving); there is a red navigation light associated with it
Chord Line
line between leading edge and trailing edge of an airfoil (wing); any deflection makes aircraft move about roll axis; the tip chord is simply the end of the wings (cross section line); chord length is distance from leading edge to trailing edge
Mean Camber Line
line drawn halfway between the upper and lower surfaces of a wing; positive camber: means camber line is above chord line; negative camber: means camber line is below chord line; symmetrical airfoil; mean camber line coincides with chord line
Spoiler
located on top/middle of wings; changes lift and drag and rotates the body
Keel
main center line (backbone) of a vessel or the extension of hull that increases stability in the water
Beam
max width of a vessel
Altimeter
measures altitude of an aircraft
Vertical Velocity Indicator
measures rate of climb or descent of aircraft
Cleat
metal fitting on which a rope can be fastened
Winglet
more or less little vertical stabilizers on the wingtips that increase the lift generated at the wingtip, and reduce the lift-induced drag caused by wingtip vertices, improving lift-to-drag ratio
Elevator
on back of horizontal stabilizer; changes pitch (up and down); deflection makes the aircraft move about the pitch axis; pulling back on the controls defects the elevators upward into the air-stream, this pushes the tail down and the nose up and then you're climbing.
Flaps
on back of wings adjacent to fuselage; they change lift and drag; when fully extended will generally produced more lift and more drag; so that the plane can descend or climb at a steeper angle or slower airspeed
Bulkhead
one of the straight upright portions dividing a ship into compartments
Rectangular Wing
or straight wing
Variable-sweep wing
or variable geometry wing is a wing that may be swept back and then returned to original position during flight; it is swept back at high speeds to reduce drag and extended for slower speeds
Big Arrows on Runway
pointing to emergency overrun (only); taxi, takeoff, and landing aren't allowed (threshold area)
Elliptical Wing
probably the same as a tapered wing; no corners, curved all the way around life a flattened oval or an ellipse
Pitch Angle
refers to the angle between the extended fuselage of the aircraft and the horizon; if the plane is flying straight up it would have a pitch angle of 90 degrees, if it's flying straight and level then it has a pitch angle of 0 degrees
Flashing white
return to starting point on airport/not used by FAA
All Clear
right hand up
Starboard
right side of the ship (if driving); there is a green navigation light associated with it
Propeller
rotates and powers a boat forward or backward
Pitch axis
runs from wing tip to wing tip, passing through the plane's center of gravity
Vertical Axis
runs straight up and down through center of gravity; the moment of yaw occurs in it
Tachometer
shows speed at which the engine crankshaft is rotating
Rudder
sits on the back of the vertical stabilizer; controls direction of the yaw (side to side) about the aircraft's vertical axis
Trim Tabs
small control surfaces that permit the pilot to balance control forces in steady flight to relieve pressure on the aircraft's controls and thus, pilot fatigue; trim tabs are primarily used on the elevators but often exist on the ailerons and/or rudders
Vortex
spinning air, more or less; planes create them behind themselves, vortices can cause both wings of a trailing aircraft to stall
Threshold Line
start of usable portion of runway for landing; marked by a couple of fat lines
Steady Red
stop/give way to the other aircraft and continue circling
Flashing Red
taxi clear of runway in use/airport unsafe do not land
True Air Speed
the actual velocity of an aircraft traveling through the air
Angle of Attack
the angle at which the wing meets the relative wing
Angle of Incidence
the angle between the wing's chord and the longitudinal axis of an aircraft (a fixed value).
Angle of Deflection
the angle of a control surface (rudder, aileron, etc.) relative to the airstream; how hard is the control surface deflecting
Camber
the asymmetry between the top and the bottom curves of an airfoil in cross-section; this shape causes the air to travel faster over the top portion of the wing and therefore causes lift; there is upper and lower camber above and below the chord line
Calibrated Airspeed
the corrected airspeed taking into account instrumental error
Compass Deviation
the error of a magnetic compass due to local magnetism
Bow
the front section of the ship
Stability
the inherent ability of a body, after its equilibrium is disturbed, to develop forces or moments that tend to return the body to its original position; the ability of an airplane to return, of its own accord, to its original condition of flight after it has been disturbed by some outside force, such as turbulent air, makes the airplane easier to fly and requires less effort to control
Indicated Air Speed
the instrumental indication of the dynamic pressure of the airplane during flight
Galley
the kitchen compartment of the ship
Vertical Lift Component
the lift acting upward and opposing weight
Yaw
the motion of the longitudinal about the vertical axis; redder contd: push right rudder pedal moves rudder control surface into the wind steam to the right; this pushes the tail of the aircraft to the left and the nose to the right, and vise-a-versa
Hull
the outer walls of a ship, the main body of the ship
Stern
the rear section of the ship
Forecastle
the section of the upper deck of a ship located at the bow
Horizontal Lift Component
the side ward force that forces that airplane from straight flight and causes it to turn; it opposes inertia or centrifugal force
Frame
the skeleton of the boat; the frame
Empennage
the tail; vertical and horizontal stabilizers and aft section of fuselage
Stem
the very most forward part of a boat or ship's bow and is an extension of the keel itself and curves up to the wale of the boat. The stem is more often found on wooden boats or ships, but not exclusively
Gunwale
upper edge of a vessel's side
Lift
upward force; a wing makes lift from relatively positive air pressure below the wing's surface and negative air pressure above the wing's surface, this happens because the top of the wing is curved and the bottom of the wing is flat, more or less; the air flowing over the top travels a little father than the air flowing along the flat bottom...
Vertical Stabilizer
vertical wing-like part of the tail; controls yaw
Relative Wind
wind travel equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to flight path
Sweptback wing
wings like you would see on a commercial jet