Jim Logajan
En-Route
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- Jun 6, 2008
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I see what the OP was thinking,
If you know exactly where the nose is pointed, and exactly where the plane is actually going you could figure out what angle the relative wind is coming from, at least in still air.
However here is another scenario where the calculating AOA would be difficult. I can hang on my prop behind the curve and get the ASI to indicate zero. That would sure throw a wrench at the computer trying to figure out TAS.
If your indicated speed is zero then AOA is pretty much a pointless value. Below is my quick attempt to work out the math. I was going to use Mathcad so it would look pretty, but my copy is on another computer. I think faster anyway with paper and pencil. Easy to scan this in, crop and shrink and upload the image. If you can't read my writing, basically the equation seems to be:
Theta_aoa = Theta_pitch - arcsin(vertical_speed/indicated_airspeed)
The "zero" for Theta_pitch can be any angle in space, really. But then the "safe" maximum value for Theta_aoa needs to be adjusted accordingly.
If there are mistakes in my math or assumptions I'm sure I'll hear about them!