ON THE USE OF WINDS IN FLIGHT PLANNING
- 1 April 1949
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Meteorology
- Vol. 6 (2) , 150-159
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1949)006<0150:otuowi>2.0.co;2
Abstract
The first part of the paper reviews the theory of the single-heading flight of an airplane on a plane surface with unchanging geostrophic wind and shows that the simplicity of the formula for the heading of such a flight is lost if the surface is spherical or if the wind field is changing. It is also shown that the single-heading flight is neither necessarily faster nor necessarily slower than the straight-line flight. In the second part, the problem of determining the quickest flight path between two given points for a given air speed is discussed. When the wind is not everywhere zero, time can frequently be saved by deviating from the great-circle route to take advantage of stronger tail winds or weaker headwinds. This is especially true on longer flights. To determine the paths having the least possible flight time for a given wind field (in general varying in both space and time) is a fairly complicated problem in the calculus of variations. It was first solved by Zermelo in 1930; his solution is applicable, however, only to flat surfaces. The solution has now been extended to cover the case of flight on the surface of a sphere, such as the earth. The solution takes the form of a differential equation which the airplane's heading is to satisfy. A similar equation for flight in three dimensions is discussed.Keywords
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