Aerodynamics is the branch of fluid mechanics that studies the motion of air and other gases, and the forces they exert on solid bodies moving through them. It forms the scientific foundation for the design of aircraft, rockets, automobiles, and buildings, governing phenomena such as lift, drag, and pressure distribution. Understanding aerodynamic principles is essential for optimising vehicle performance, fuel efficiency, and structural stability at various speeds and altitudes.
| Regime | Mach Range | Typical Speed (km/h) | Example Vehicle | Key Effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subsonic | M < 0.8 | < 980 | Commercial airliner | Streamlined flow |
| Transonic | 0.8 – 1.2 | 980 – 1470 | Fighter jet | Shock wave onset |
| Supersonic | 1.2 – 5.0 | 1470 – 6125 | Concorde | Oblique shock waves |
| Hypersonic | M > 5.0 | > 6125 | Space shuttle re-entry | Aerodynamic heating |
| Low-speed subsonic | M < 0.3 | < 368 | Light aircraft | Incompressible flow |
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Aerodynamic lift is the component of the net aerodynamic force acting perpendicular to the direction of the oncoming airflow, enabling aircraft, wings, and aerofoils to overcome gravity. It arises primarily from the pressure difference between the upper and lower surfaces of a wing, explained by Bernoulli's principle and the Kutta-Joukowski theorem. Lift is fundamental to fixed-wing flight and is carefully optimised in aircraft design through wing shape, angle of attack, and airspeed.
Aerodynamic drag is the resistive force exerted on a body moving through a fluid (such as air), acting parallel and opposite to the direction of motion. It consists of pressure drag (form drag), skin friction drag, and induced drag, all of which dissipate kinetic energy and reduce vehicle efficiency. Minimising drag is a primary goal in the aerodynamic design of aircraft, rockets, and high-speed ground vehicles.
The Mach number is a dimensionless quantity defined as the ratio of the speed of a body (or flow) to the local speed of sound in the surrounding medium. Named after Austrian physicist Ernst Mach, it is the primary parameter characterising compressibility effects in aerodynamics; below Mach 1 (subsonic) flow behaves nearly incompressibly, while above it (supersonic) shock waves form. The Mach number determines the applicable aerodynamic model, the nature of pressure disturbances, and the onset of critical phenomena such as wave drag and sonic booms.
From Greek aer (air) and dynamis (power, force), combined in the 19th century. The term entered scientific usage in the 1830s as physicists began systematically studying air resistance on moving objects.