- crosswind component
- боковая составляющая ветра
Авиасловарь. М.А.Левин. 2004.
Авиасловарь. М.А.Левин. 2004.
crosswind component — A component of wind velocity 90° to the track, runway, or any other direction. It is equal to W/V (Wind velocity) × sine A, where A is the angle between W/V and the direction concerned … Aviation dictionary
Crosswind — A crosswind is any wind that has a perpendicular component to the line or direction of travel. In aviation, a crosswind is the component of wind that is blowing across the runway making landings and take offs more difficult than if the wind were… … Wikipedia
Crosswind landing — A crosswind landing is a landing maneuver in which a significant component of the prevailing wind is perpendicular to the runway center line. Contents 1 Significance 2 Techniques 2.1 De Crab 2.2 Crab … Wikipedia
crosswind force — noun : the component perpendicular to the lift and to the drag of the total air force on an airplane or any part thereof … Useful english dictionary
Crabbed Approach — Boeing 707 (E 3 Sentry − „AWACS“) beim Landeanflug mit Vorhaltewinkel Windsack … Deutsch Wikipedia
Seitenwindlandung — Boeing 707 (E 3 Sentry − „AWACS“) beim Landeanflug mit Vorhaltewinkel … Deutsch Wikipedia
Tailwind — A tailwind is a wind that blows in the direction of travel of an object. A tailwind increases the object s speed and reduces the time required to reach its destination. Tailwinds are commonly measured in relation to the speed of vehicles commonly … Wikipedia
Headwind — A headwind is a wind that blows against the direction of travel of an object. A headwind reduces the object s speed and increases the time required to reach its destination. Headwinds are commonly measured in relation to the speed of vehicles… … Wikipedia
Magnus effect — The Magnus effect, demonstrated on a ball. v represents the wind velocity, the arrow F the resulting force towards the side of lower pressure. The Magnus effect is the phenomenon whereby a spinning object flying in a fluid creates a whirlpool of… … Wikipedia
Course (navigation) — In navigation, a vehicle s course is the angle that the intended path of the vehicle makes with a fixed reference object (typically true north). Typically course is measured in degrees from 0° clockwise to 360° in compass convention (0° being… … Wikipedia
Continental Airlines Flight 1404 — Runway overrun summary Date December 20, 2008 (2008 12 20 … Wikipedia