Hello all,
I am writing to ask about the forces in a glide. I would like to I have the correct understanding of these basic concepts before I study further, I appreciate your help!
First, I noticed that in the study guide, no matter how lift and drag changes in direction and/or magnitude in a glide, they must be perpendicular to each other. However, as I know, lift is perpendicular to relative airflow and flight path, but not the thrust nor drag. An example is that an aircraft flying level can have a very high angle of attack but with thrust pointing upward. I wonder if I have mixed up some important concepts here...Please let me know if I did. My question is, must lift at any time be perpendicular to drag in a glide like what is shown in the figure?
Second, as a student I found a lot of explanations of how an aircraft descend/glide. One of them is shown below (explanation A) while the study guide uses explanation B. May I know if they actually have the same result?
Third, I would like to confirm whether my understanding of
increased drag in a glide is correct (shown in explanation B ). If the pilot has done anything that increases drag (especially lowering the flaps and increasing AoA), the drag and lift will both change in direction (D->D1) (L->L1) as well because the resultant of lift and drag (I named it RLD for convenience) always be fully vertical (opposite to weight) and has the exact the same magnitude with weight. Also, the lift and drag will always be perpendicular (not sure if it is right at the moment).
Thanks very much!
Anson