### Q51: What is the mean value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q51 - A) 15° C/100 m - B) 100 m/sec² - C) 9.81 m/sec² - D) 1013.25 hPa **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s² (ISA value). This value is fundamental in aeronautics: it is used to calculate weight (W = m × g), load factor, and appears in all performance equations. 1013.25 hPa is the standard pressure at sea level, and 15°C/100 m is not a correct gradient (the standard lapse rate is 0.65°C/100 m). ### Q52: During a sideslip, the permitted flap position is... ^t80q52 - A) Flaps fully retracted - B) Flaps fully extended - C) Determined by the downward vertical component of the airspeed - D) Specified in the flight manual (AFM) **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The permitted flap position during a sideslip is always specified in the aircraft flight manual (AFM/POH). Some gliders prohibit extended flaps in a sideslip because the combination of flaps and deflected rudder can create dangerous aerodynamic couples or exceed structural limits. Others permit certain configurations. The only correct answer is therefore to consult the AFM. ### Q53: An aircraft is said to have dynamic stability when... ^t80q53 - A) It is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance - B) It is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance - C) The rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons - D) The permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Dynamic stability describes the behaviour of an aircraft over time after a disturbance. A dynamically stable aircraft returns automatically to its original equilibrium (trim) after being disturbed — the oscillations progressively damp out. Answer A describes so-called "neutral or convergent stability towards a new equilibrium", which is different. Static stability (the immediate tendency to return) is a necessary but not sufficient condition for dynamic stability. ### Q54: In severe turbulence, airspeed must be reduced... ^t80q54 - A) To normal cruising speed - B) To a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator - C) To the minimum constant speed in landing configuration - D) To below the manoeuvring speed V_A **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The manoeuvring speed V_A (or turbulence penetration speed) is the maximum speed at which full control surface deflections or severe wind gusts will not cause the structural limit load to be exceeded. Below V_A, the wing will stall before the structural limit load is reached, thereby protecting the structure. In severe turbulence, speed must be reduced below V_A to avoid structural damage from gust dynamic loads. ### Q55: In the ICAO standard atmosphere, the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere is... ^t80q55 - A) 2°C/100 ft - B) 0.65°C/1000 ft - C) 0.65°C/100 m - D) 2°C/100 m **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere (ISA), temperature decreases by 0.65°C for every 100 m of altitude in the troposphere (or equivalently, 2°C per 1000 ft, or 6.5°C/1000 m). Answer B (0.65°C/1000 ft) is incorrect because the unit is wrong — this would be far too small a lapse rate. Answer C is the only correct one: 0.65°C per 100 m of altitude. ### Q56: At approximately what altitude does atmospheric pressure fall to half its sea-level value? ^t80q56 - A) 5,500 m - B) 6,600 m - C) 6,600 ft - D) 5,500 ft **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude in an approximately exponential manner. In the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure is approximately half the sea-level pressure (1013.25 hPa → ~506 hPa) at an altitude of approximately 5,500 m (18,000 ft). This value is important for high-altitude physiology (oxygen requirements) and for density altitude performance calculations. ### Q57: Density altitude always corresponds to... ^t80q57 - A) The altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere - B) The true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error - C) Pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature - D) The altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Density altitude is the altitude at which the aircraft would be in the ISA standard atmosphere if the air density were the same as in actual conditions. It is calculated from pressure altitude (altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa) corrected for the temperature deviation from ISA. A temperature higher than ISA gives a density altitude higher than pressure altitude, reducing aircraft performance. Answer A describes pressure altitude, not density altitude. ### Q58: The simplified continuity law applied to an airflow states: *In a given period of time, a flowing air mass is conserved regardless of the cross-section it passes through.* This means that... ^t80q58 - A) Airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases - B) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases - C) Airflow velocity remains constant - D) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The continuity equation states that for an incompressible fluid, the volumetric flow rate Q = S × V is constant along a streamtube. If the cross-section S decreases, the velocity V must increase proportionally to keep Q constant. This principle, combined with Bernoulli's theorem, explains why air accelerates over the curved upper surface of an aerofoil, creating a low-pressure region that generates lift. ### Q59: The aerodynamic resultant (drag and lift) depends on air density. When air density decreases... ^t80q59 - A) Both drag and lift decrease - B) Both drag and lift increase - C) Drag increases while lift decreases - D) Drag decreases while lift increases **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** Both lift and drag are proportional to the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². When air density ρ decreases (at altitude or in high temperatures), q decreases for a given speed, which reduces both lift and drag. This is why aircraft performance deteriorates at high altitude or in great heat: the aircraft must fly faster (higher TAS) to generate the same lift, while the total aerodynamic resistance decreases for a constant indicated airspeed. ### Q60: What is the name of the point about which, when the angle of attack changes, the pitching moment around the lateral axis does not vary? ^t80q60 - A) Centre of symmetry - B) Centre of gravity - C) Aerodynamic centre - D) Neutral point **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The neutral point (also called the aerodynamic centre at wing level, but "neutral point" for the complete aircraft) is the point about which the pitching moment remains constant regardless of changes in angle of attack. For a stable aircraft, the centre of gravity must be forward of the neutral point — the CG-to-neutral point distance constitutes the static stability margin. Note: for an isolated aerofoil, this point corresponds to the aerodynamic centre (at approximately 25% of the chord); for the complete aircraft, the neutral point accounts for the contribution of the horizontal stabiliser. ### Q61: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis is called... ^t80q61 - A) The sweep angle - B) The angle of attack - C) The dihedral angle - D) The rigging angle (angle of incidence) **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The rigging angle (or angle of incidence) is the fixed angle, defined at construction, between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the fuselage. It does not vary in flight. It should not be confused with the angle of attack, which is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the relative wind (and which varies in flight according to attitude and speed). The rigging angle is chosen by the manufacturer so that the wing generates the necessary lift in cruise at an aerodynamically favourable fuselage attitude. ### Q62: What does the transition point correspond to? ^t80q62 - A) The lateral roll of the aircraft - B) The point at which CL_max is reached - C) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one - D) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The transition point is precisely the location on the aerofoil where the boundary layer changes from a laminar regime (ordered flow, in parallel layers) to a turbulent regime (disordered flow, with transverse mixing). This transition is irreversible in the direction of flow: the change is from laminar to turbulent, never the reverse. The position of the transition point depends on the Reynolds number, the pressure gradient, and surface roughness — a favourable pressure gradient (acceleration) maintains laminar flow, while an adverse gradient (deceleration) triggers transition. ### Q63: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^t80q63 - A) Partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed - B) A higher cruise speed - C) Progressive flow separation along the wingspan - D) Simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Wing twist (geometric or aerodynamic) varies the angle of incidence or aerodynamic characteristics along the span, so that the stall does not occur simultaneously across the entire wing. The root (higher angle of incidence) reaches the critical angle first and stalls progressively, while the outer sections remain attached. This progressive (rather than simultaneous) flow separation improves stall safety and maintains roll control via the ailerons. The effect on adverse yaw (A) is indirect and marginal. ### Q64: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^t80q64 - A) Its mass - B) Its internal temperature - C) Its density - D) The formation of vortices **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Form drag (pressure drag) is caused by the pressure difference between the front and rear of a body, due to boundary layer separation and the formation of vortices in the wake. The more intense the vortex formation (unStreamlined body, blunt trailing edge), the higher the form drag. This is why streamlined aerofoils have much lower form drag than a flat plate or sphere — their progressively converging shape allows the flow to remain attached longer, reducing the turbulent wake. ### Q65: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc in an airflow depends notably on... ^t80q65 - A) Its weight - B) Its density - C) The surface area perpendicular to the airflow - D) The tensile strength of its material **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc (non-streamlined body) is pressure drag: it depends primarily on the frontal surface area S exposed perpendicularly to the airflow, and on the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². The formula is D = CD × q × S. The material strength, the disc's own density, or its weight do not influence aerodynamic drag — this is purely a function of shape, projected area, and flow conditions. ### Q66: On the speed polar, which tangent touches the curve at the point of minimum sink rate? ^t80q66 > **Speed Polar:** > ![[figures/t80_q66.png]] > *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)* > *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind* > *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate* > *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)* - A) Tangent (A) - B) Tangent (B) - C) Tangent (D) - D) Tangent (C) **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** On the speed polar (curve showing the sink rate W as a function of horizontal speed V), the point of minimum sink rate corresponds to the lowest point of the curve (the smallest value of W in absolute terms). The tangent at this point is a horizontal tangent — this is tangent (C) on the diagram. This point corresponds to the minimum sink speed, used to maximise flight time or to exploit thermals. The tangent drawn from the origin to the polar (tangent B) gives the speed for the best L/D ratio (best glide ratio). ### Q67: Induced drag increases... ^t80q67 - A) As parasite drag increases - B) With decreasing angle of attack - C) With increasing angle of attack - D) With increasing airspeed **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL²: D_induced = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. By increasing the angle of attack, CL increases, and therefore CL² increases, causing induced drag to grow. In level flight at constant speed, an increase in angle of attack corresponds to a lower speed, which further increases induced drag (D_induced ∝ 1/V²). By increasing speed (D), CL decreases in level flight and induced drag decreases. Parasite drag (A) varies independently of induced drag. ### Q68: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a level turn at 45-degree bank compare to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q68 - A) It decreases - B) It does not change - C) It increases - D) It depends on the aircraft type **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** In a horizontal turn at bank angle φ, the load factor is n = 1/cos(φ). At 45° of bank, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 ≈ 1.41. The stall speed in the turn is Vs_turn = Vs × √n = Vs × √1.41 ≈ Vs × 1.19. Therefore the minimum speed increases by approximately 19% compared to straight-and-level flight. This increase in stall speed during turns is a fundamental safety concept — tight turns at low altitude (such as on final approach) are particularly dangerous because the margin above the stall is reduced. ### Q69: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^t80q69 - A) The gyroscopic effect when a turn is initiated - B) The lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated - C) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up - D) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the asymmetry of drag between the two ailerons during turn entry. The aileron that rises (on the high-wing side) increases the local angle of attack, generating more lift but also more induced drag. This additional drag on the rising side creates a yawing moment towards the rising side — i.e. in the opposite direction to the turn (hence "adverse yaw"). Differential ailerons and spoiler-airbrakes are technical solutions to mitigate this effect. ### Q70: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed shown by the ASI... ^t80q70 - A) Corrected for position and instrument errors only - B) Without any correction - C) Adjusted for air density only - D) Corrected for both position/instrument errors and air density **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** True airspeed (TAS) is obtained from indicated airspeed (IAS) by applying two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors (yielding calibrated airspeed, CAS), then the density correction (accounting for the difference between actual air density and standard sea-level density). TAS is therefore the actual speed of the aircraft through the air mass. At high altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS because air density is lower. ### Q71: The speed range authorised for the use of slotted flaps is: ^t80q71 - A) Unlimited - B) Limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc - C) Indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally shown on the airspeed indicator (ASI) - D) Limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed (Va) **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The slotted flap speed range is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (white or light green arc). It varies by glider type. ### Q72: Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalisation from: ^t80q72 - A) The lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip - B) The upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip - C) The lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge - D) The upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** Wing tip vortices (induced vortices) come from pressure equalization from the lower surface (high pressure) to the upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This phenomenon generates induced drag. ### Q73: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always the angle between: ^t80q73 - A) The chord line and the relative airflow direction - B) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction - C) The horizon and the general airflow direction - D) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind direction). It is not the angle with the horizon nor with the longitudinal axis. ### Q74: In the standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^t80q74 - A) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa - B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa - C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg - D) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The pressure in ICAO standard atmosphere at sea level is 1013.25 hPa (millibars) = 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). 29.92 hPa is incorrect. ### Q75: Regarding airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^t80q75 ![[figures/t80_q75.png]] - A) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed - B) The air mass flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed - C) The speed of the air mass does not vary - D) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the line equidistant between the lower and upper surfaces. In the figure, it is represented by line B. ### Q76: In a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, why is slight back-pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q76 - A) To prevent slipping inward in the turn - B) To reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force - C) To prevent an outward sideslip in the turn - D) To slightly increase lift **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure is needed to increase lift and balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1). Lift must compensate for both gravity and centrifugal force. ### Q77: When the frontal area of a disc in an airflow is tripled, drag increases by: ^t80q77 - A) 9 times - B) 1.5 times - C) 3 times - D) 6 times **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack (stall angle), regardless of airspeed. At this angle, airflow separation on the upper surface causes a sudden drop in lift. ### Q78: Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^t80q78 - A) The angle of incidence of the same aerofoil, from root to wing tip - B) The aerofoil profile from root to wing tip - C) The angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron - D) The wing dihedral, from root to tip **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical angle), specific to each airfoil. It is not related to the nose attitude relative to the horizon. ### Q79: What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q79 - A) 1013.25 hPa - B) 15° C/100 m - C) 9.81 m/sec² - D) 100 m/sec² **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s². This is the ISA value used in all performance calculations. ### Q80: The speed displayed on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^t80q80 - A) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule - B) The difference between static pressure and total pressure - C) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule - D) The weathervane effect, where pressure decreases **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Airspeed indicator reading is based on the difference between static pressure and total pressure (dynamic pressure). The ASI measures this difference via the Pitot tube and static port. ### Q81: The horizontal and vertical stabilisers serve in particular to: ^t80q81 - A) Control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis - B) Reduce the formation of wing tip vortices - C) Stabilise the aircraft in flight - D) Reduce air resistance **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve primarily to stabilize the aircraft in flight (longitudinal and directional stability). Without them, the aircraft would be unstable. ### Q82: When slotted flaps are extended, airflow separation: ^t80q82 - A) Occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps - B) Occurs at a higher speed - C) None of the answers is correct - D) Occurs at a lower speed **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed, because flaps increase the maximum lift coefficient (CL max). Stall speed decreases. ### Q83: The aerodynamic centre of an aerofoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^t80q83 - A) The weight - B) The resultant of all pressure forces acting on the aerofoil - C) The tyre pressure on the runway - D) The airflow at the leading edge **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant of aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is distinct from the center of pressure (which moves) and the center of gravity. ### Q84: Pressures are expressed in: ^t80q84 - A) Pa, psi, g - B) Bar, Pa, m/sec² - C) Bar, psi, Pa - D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha) **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Pressures are expressed in bar, psi (pounds per square inch) and Pa (Pascal). g is an acceleration, not a pressure. Alpha (a) is not a pressure unit. ### Q85: TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^t80q85 - A) The aircraft relative to the ground - B) The aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass - C) The aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure - D) The reading on the airspeed indicator (ASI) **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** TAS (True Air Speed) is the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass. It is the actual speed through the air, corrected for atmospheric density. ### Q86: Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^t80q86 - A) Leading edge slats - B) The horizontal stabiliser - C) The fin (vertical stabiliser) - D) Wing dihedral **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Yaw stability is provided by the fin (vertical stabilizer/rudder). Wing sweep contributes to roll stability, not yaw. ### Q87: The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^t80q87 ![[figures/t80_q87.png]] - A) Fowler - B) Split Flap - C) Slotted Flap - D) Plain Flap **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The flap shown, extending from the wing with a slot, is a Slotted Flap. The slot channels air from the lower to upper surface, delaying separation. ### Q88: The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^t80q88 - A) In straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence - B) In calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorised speed - C) During an abrupt pull-out after a dive - D) In straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The risk of stall/separation appears mainly during an abrupt pull-out after a dive, as the angle of attack increases very rapidly and can exceed the critical angle before the pilot can react. ### Q89: The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^t80q89 - A) The mass of the body - B) The chemical composition of the body - C) The density of the air - D) The density of the body **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends notably on air density (ρ), since F_D = Cd × 0.5 × ρ × v² × A. The body's own density, chemical composition, and mass do not directly affect aerodynamic drag. ### Q90: In the drawing below, the aerofoil chord is represented by: ^t80q90 ![[figures/t80_q90.png]] - A) M - B) K - C) H - D) A **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The chord line is the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge. In the figure, it is represented by H. ### Q91: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always measured between: ^t80q91 - A) The chord line and the direction of the relative airflow - B) The longitudinal axis and the general airflow direction - C) The longitudinal axis and the horizon - D) It varies depending on the pilot's weight **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** The angle of attack (AoA) is defined as the angle between the chord line and the direction of the undisturbed relative airflow, making A correct. Option B is wrong because the longitudinal axis is a structural reference, not an aerodynamic one; AoA is measured from the chord line. Option C confuses AoA with pitch attitude, which relates the longitudinal axis to the horizon. Option D is nonsensical — AoA is a geometric and aerodynamic property entirely independent of the pilot's weight. ### Q92: Given equal frontal area and equal airflow speed, what determines the drag of a body? ^t80q92 - A) Its weight - B) Its density - C) Its shape - D) The position of its centre of gravity **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** When frontal area and airspeed are held constant, the remaining variable in the drag equation D = CD × 0.5 × rho × V² × S is the drag coefficient CD, which is determined entirely by the body's shape. A streamlined shape produces far less drag than a blunt one. Options A and B are wrong because weight and material density have no direct aerodynamic effect — drag depends on external geometry, not internal mass distribution. Option D is incorrect because the centre of gravity affects stability, not the aerodynamic drag coefficient. ### Q93: What is the origin of induced drag on a wing? ^t80q93 - A) The angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction - B) Airspeed - C) Pressure equalisation from the lower surface toward the upper surface - D) Pressure equalisation from the upper surface toward the lower surface **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces. At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, forming trailing vortices that tilt the lift vector rearward, creating induced drag. Option D reverses the flow direction — air moves from high to low pressure, not the other way. Option A describes interference drag at the wing root, and option B is too vague — airspeed alone is not the origin of induced drag. ### Q94: What is the sea-level pressure in the ICAO standard atmosphere? ^t80q94 - A) 29.92 hPa - B) 1012.35 hPa - C) 1013.25 hPa - D) It depends on latitude **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The ICAO International Standard Atmosphere defines sea-level pressure as exactly 1013.25 hPa (hectopascals). Option A gives 29.92, which is the equivalent value in inches of mercury (inHg), not hPa — 29.92 hPa would be an absurdly low pressure. Option B (1012.35 hPa) is simply incorrect. Option D is wrong because the ISA is a standardized model that does not vary with latitude, even though real atmospheric pressure does. ### Q95: In the aerofoil diagram below, which line represents the mean camber line? ^t80q95 ![[figures/t80_q95.png]] - A) H - B) B - C) G + J - D) A **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, representing the profile's curvature. In this diagram, line B corresponds to this curved reference line. Options A, C, and D represent other aerofoil features such as the chord line, thickness distribution, or surface contours, not the mean camber line. ### Q96: In a level turn without sideslip or altitude loss, why is back pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q96 - A) To prevent an inward slip during the turn - B) To slow down and reduce centrifugal force - C) To prevent an outward skid during the turn - D) To increase lift so it balances both weight and centrifugal force **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the load factor exceeds 1 because lift must counterbalance both the aircraft's weight and provide the centripetal force for the curved flight path. Back pressure on the elevator increases the angle of attack and thus total lift to meet this requirement. Option A is wrong because slips are corrected with rudder, not elevator. Option B is incorrect — the purpose is not to slow down. Option C is also wrong because skid prevention is a rudder function, not an elevator function. ### Q97: A wing stall occurs: ^t80q97 - A) At the red radial line on the airspeed indicator - B) When a critical angle of attack is exceeded - C) Following a reduction in engine power - D) Only when the nose is pitched excessively above the horizon **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** A stall occurs when the wing's angle of attack exceeds the critical value (typically around 15-18 degrees), causing flow separation from the upper surface and a sudden loss of lift. This is a fundamental aerodynamic principle independent of airspeed or attitude. Option A is wrong because the red line (VNE) relates to structural speed limits, not stall. Option C is incorrect — reducing power alone does not cause a stall if AoA remains below critical. Option D is false because a stall can occur at any pitch attitude or airspeed, as long as the critical AoA is exceeded. ### Q98: At what condition does airflow separation from an aerofoil occur? ^t80q98 - A) Only at a specific aircraft altitude - B) Only at a given nose position relative to the horizon - C) Simultaneously across the entire span - D) At a specific angle of attack **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs when the angle of attack reaches the critical stall angle, which is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape. Option A is wrong because stall AoA is independent of altitude. Option B confuses pitch attitude with angle of attack — a wing can stall at any nose position. Option C is incorrect because, thanks to wing design features like washout, the stall typically progresses from root to tip rather than occurring simultaneously across the entire span. ### Q99: What is the mean gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^t80q99 - A) 9.81 m/sec2 - B) 100 m/sec2 - C) 1013.5 hPa - D) 15° C/100 m **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at sea level is 9.81 m/s², used throughout aviation for weight, load factor, and performance calculations. Option B (100 m/s²) is roughly ten times too large. Option C (1013.5 hPa) is a pressure value close to the ISA sea-level pressure, not an acceleration. Option D (15°C/100 m) resembles a temperature lapse rate format but is far too high — the ISA lapse rate is 0.65°C per 100 m. ### Q100: True Airspeed (TAS) is obtained from the airspeed indicator (ASI) reading by: ^t80q100 - A) No corrections at all - B) Correcting for position and instrument errors - C) Applying corrections for both position/instrument errors and atmospheric density - D) Adjusting for atmospheric density alone **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** TAS is derived from the ASI reading (IAS) through two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors are removed to obtain calibrated airspeed (CAS), then a density correction accounts for the difference between actual air density and ISA sea-level density. Option A is wrong because uncorrected IAS does not equal TAS. Option B yields only CAS, not TAS. Option D omits the instrument/position error correction, which is always the first step.