Principles of Flight
Understand the four forces, how wings generate lift, what causes a stall, and the physics that make flight possible. The foundation every pilot builds on.
The Four Forces of Flight
Every aircraft in flight is acted upon by four fundamental forces: lift, weight, thrust, and drag. Understanding how these forces interact is the single most important concept in aviation. Everything from takeoff performance to stall recovery traces back to the balance — or imbalance — of these four forces.
In straight, level, unaccelerated flight, the forces are in equilibrium. This doesn’t mean they’re all equal to each other — it means the opposing pairs cancel out. Lift equals weight. Thrust equals drag. The moment any pair falls out of balance, the aircraft accelerates, decelerates, climbs, or descends.
In steady flight, the sum of all upward force components equals the sum of all downward components, and the sum of all forward components equals the sum of all backward components. The classic “lift = weight, thrust = drag” is accurate for level unaccelerated flight — but in climbs or glides, portions of each force vector contribute to the other pair.
Lift
Produced by the dynamic effect of air acting on the airfoil. Acts perpendicular to the flight path through the center of lift. In level flight, lift opposes weight. Lift results from pressure differences caused by the wing’s shape and angle relative to oncoming airflow.
The primary contributors are wing shape (camber), angle of attack, air density, and the square of velocity. Doubling airspeed quadruples lift — all else equal.
Quick Review — Flip each card
Click a card to reveal the definition.
What opposes lift?
Weight — the force of gravity acting downward through the center of gravity.
What opposes thrust?
Drag — the aerodynamic resistance that opposes the aircraft’s forward motion.
Level unaccelerated flight
Lift = Weight AND Thrust = Drag. Both opposing pairs are in perfect balance.
Force direction of lift
Perpendicular to the flight path and to the lateral axis — NOT simply “straight up.”
Tap each card to flip it ↑
How Lift Works
Lift is often misunderstood. The common explanation — “air moves faster over the curved top of the wing, creating lower pressure” — is correct but incomplete. Two physical principles work together to produce lift: Bernoulli’s Principle and Newton’s Third Law.
Bernoulli’s Principle
Daniel Bernoulli’s discovery: in a moving fluid, as velocity increases, pressure decreases. A wing’s airfoil shape — curved on top, flatter on the bottom — causes air to accelerate over the upper surface. This faster-moving air creates a region of lower pressure above the wing. The higher pressure below pushes the wing upward.
A garden hose squeezed at the end speeds up the water and spreads it wide. The wing’s curved shape does the same thing to air — narrowing the effective channel above accelerates it, reducing pressure.
Newton’s Third Law
The wing also deflects air downward. By pushing air down, the wing receives an equal and opposite upward reaction force. This action-reaction component of lift is especially significant at high angles of attack. Both Bernoulli and Newton are always present — they’re two ways of describing the same physical event.
The Lift Equation
The most critical takeaway is the V² relationship. Velocity is squared — small speed changes produce large lift changes. An aircraft at 100 knots generates four times the lift it produces at 50 knots. This is why precise airspeed control on approach is so important.
Air density (ρ) is a direct multiplier in the lift equation. At Truckee-Tahoe (KTRK, 5,900 ft MSL) on a hot summer afternoon, density altitude can exceed 9,000 feet. Your wings are operating in air as thin as 9,000 ft — takeoff roll lengthens, climb rate suffers, and stall speed increases. This is one of the most important real-world applications of lift theory for mountain flying.
Angle of Attack
Angle of attack (AOA) is the acute angle between the chord line of the airfoil and the direction of the relative wind. It is not the same as pitch attitude. An aircraft can be in a nose-low attitude and still be at a dangerously high angle of attack.
AOA vs. Lift & Drag — Visual Relationship
“Can an aircraft stall in a nose-low attitude?” The answer is yes. Any time AOA exceeds the critical value, the wing stalls — regardless of airspeed, altitude, or pitch attitude. A steep spiral dive with abrupt back pressure can produce a stall at high airspeed. Always think in terms of AOA, not pitch.
AOA vs. Pitch Attitude
Pitch attitude is what you see on the attitude indicator — the nose position relative to the horizon. AOA is the wing’s orientation relative to the airflow. They’re related but not the same. In a steep turn at low airspeed, the nose may not appear unusually high, yet AOA could be near the critical value.
Mountain flying environments like KTRK make this distinction especially important — thinner air and rough terrain demand constant AOA awareness.
Types of Drag
Drag is any force opposing the aircraft’s motion through the air. The FAA classifies it into two broad categories: parasite drag (not related to lift production) and induced drag (the unavoidable cost of generating lift). Understanding both — and how they change with airspeed — is one of the most tested concepts on the written exam.
Form Drag
Generated by the aircraft’s shape as air separates around it. A flat plate creates massive form drag; a streamlined fuselage creates very little. Streamlining is the primary design solution.
Skin Friction Drag
Caused by air molecules in contact with the aircraft surface. Even smooth metal has microscopic roughness. Flush rivets, waxed surfaces, and clean wings reduce this drag measurably.
Interference Drag
Where two surfaces meet — the wing root, external tanks, antennas. Airflows collide and create turbulence. Fairings smooth these transitions and reduce this drag.
Induced Drag
The unavoidable cost of lift. High-pressure air below the wing spills around the wingtip toward low pressure above, creating vortices. Highest at low speed, high AOA, and heavy weight.
Parasite drag increases with the square of airspeed — double speed, quadruple parasite drag. Induced drag decreases as speed increases. The speed where total drag is lowest is L/D max — which equals best glide speed. Examiners love this concept because it ties together efficiency, glide, and minimum drag.
Match It — Drag Types
Select a drag type, then select its description. Match all four to complete.
Drag Type
Description
Thrust & Weight
Thrust
Thrust is the forward force produced by the engine and propeller. The propeller generates thrust by accelerating a mass of air rearward — Newton’s Third Law produces the forward reaction. In level unaccelerated flight, thrust equals drag. When the pilot advances the throttle and thrust exceeds drag, the aircraft accelerates until drag rises to match the new thrust level.
At very low airspeeds in level flight, the aircraft adopts a nose-high attitude. A component of thrust acts upward, helping support some of the aircraft’s weight. This reduces effective wing loading and is why slow flight is more stable than it first appears.
Weight
Weight is the force of gravity acting through the aircraft’s center of gravity (CG), always pointing vertically downward. It includes aircraft empty weight plus pilot, passengers, fuel, and baggage. Weight changes continuously as fuel burns — a full tank of avgas in a Cessna 172 weighs over 180 pounds.
Center of Gravity — Why It Matters
The CG must remain within limits defined in the POH. A CG too far forward makes the aircraft nose-heavy and increases stall speed. A CG too far aft reduces longitudinal stability, making stall recovery more difficult — and in extreme cases, the aircraft uncontrollable.
An aft CG reduces the tail’s ability to push the nose down, impairing stall recovery. Always compute weight and balance before flight, especially with passengers in rear seats or cargo in aft baggage areas.
Stalls
A stall is one of the most safety-critical concepts in aviation — and one of the most misunderstood. Every year, loss-of-control accidents claim pilots who didn’t fully understand when and why stalls occur.
⚠️ What a Stall Actually Is
A stall occurs when the wing exceeds its critical angle of attack — typically around 17–18° for most GA airfoils. At this point, smooth airflow over the upper surface separates and becomes turbulent. Lift collapses dramatically; drag increases rapidly. A stall has nothing to do with engine power or airspeed — it is purely an AOA event.
Critical AOA ≈ 17° AOA-driven, not speed-driven Any airspeed Any altitude Any attitudeWhy Stall Speed Isn’t Fixed
POH stall speeds are published for a specific weight and configuration. In a coordinated turn, effective weight increases due to load factor. At 60° of bank, load factor is 2G. Stall speed increases with the square root of the load factor — at 2G, stall speed multiplies by √2 ≈ 1.41. A 50-knot stall becomes roughly 70 knots in a 60° bank.
In the traffic pattern or on base-to-final turn, pilots are slow AND turning. If they add too much bank, stall speed climbs well above the traffic pattern airspeed. Combined with proximity to terrain, this is a leading cause of fatal general aviation accidents. The fix: maintain coordinated flight, keep bank angles reasonable in the pattern, and always think AOA.
Stall Recovery — Four Steps
Aircraft Stability
Stability is an aircraft’s tendency to return to its original flight condition after being disturbed by a gust or control input. A stable aircraft, left alone after a disturbance, will trend back toward level flight on its own. An unstable aircraft will continue to deviate.
Positive Stability
Aircraft returns to original attitude after disturbance. Most GA aircraft. Predictable and forgiving.
Neutral Stability
Remains in new attitude after disturbance. Requires constant pilot attention to maintain desired flight condition.
Negative Stability
Continues to deviate further after disturbance. Requires immediate corrective input — dangerous without attention.
Three Axes of Stability
Longitudinal Stability (Pitch) — Lateral Axis
Tendency to return to level flight after a pitch disturbance. The horizontal stabilizer and elevator provide this. Forward CG improves it; aft CG reduces it. Most safety-critical type for most flying.
Lateral Stability (Roll) — Longitudinal Axis
Tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance. Wing dihedral (upward tilt), high wing placement, and swept wings all contribute.
Directional Stability (Yaw) — Vertical Axis
Tendency to align the nose with the relative wind after a yaw disturbance — like a weather vane. The vertical stabilizer provides this and resists skidding and slipping.
You’ve covered all seven core areas: four forces, Bernoulli and Newton lift theory, the lift equation, angle of attack, all four drag types, stall aerodynamics, and aircraft stability. These concepts underpin every other topic in ground school. Test your understanding with the quiz below.