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Equivalent airspeed (EAS) is calibrated airspeed (CAS) corrected for the compressibility of air at a non-trivial
Mach number Mach number (M or Ma) (; ) is a dimensionless quantity in fluid dynamics representing the ratio of flow velocity past a boundary to the local speed of sound. It is named after the Moravian physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach. : \mathrm = \frac ...
. It is also the airspeed at sea level in the International Standard Atmosphere at which the dynamic pressure is the same as the dynamic pressure at the true airspeed (TAS) and altitude at which the aircraft is flying. In low-speed flight, it is the speed which would be shown by an airspeed indicator with zero error.Houghton, E.L. and Carpenter, P.W. (1993), ''Aerodynamics for Engineering Students'', Section 2.3.3, Butterworth-Heinemann, Oxford UK. It is useful for predicting aircraft handling, aerodynamic loads, stalling etc. EAS = TAS \times \sqrt where: \rho\, is actual
air density The density of air or atmospheric density, denoted '' ρ'', is the mass per unit volume of Earth's atmosphere. Air density, like air pressure, decreases with increasing altitude. It also changes with variation in atmospheric pressure, temperature a ...
. \rho_0\, is standard sea level density (1.225 kg/m3 or 0.00237 slug/ft3). EAS is a function of dynamic pressure. EAS = \sqrt where: \, is dynamic pressure q = \tfrac12\, \rho\, v^, EAS can also be obtained from the aircraft
Mach number Mach number (M or Ma) (; ) is a dimensionless quantity in fluid dynamics representing the ratio of flow velocity past a boundary to the local speed of sound. It is named after the Moravian physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach. : \mathrm = \frac ...
and static pressure. EAS = M \sqrt where: \, is , the standard speed of sound at 15 °C M\, is Mach number P\, is static pressure P_0\, is standard sea level pressure (1013.25 hPa) Combining the above with the expression for Mach number gives EAS as a function of impact pressure and static pressure (valid for subsonic flow): EAS=\sqrt where: \, is impact pressure. At standard sea level, EAS is the same as calibrated airspeed (CAS) and true airspeed (TAS). At any other altitude, EAS may be obtained from CAS by correcting for compressibility error. The following simplified formula allows calculation of CAS from EAS: CAS= where: pressure ratio: \delta=\frac CAS\, and EAS\, are airspeeds and can be measured in knots, km/h, mph or any other appropriate unit. The above formula is accurate within 1% up to Mach 1.2 and useful with acceptable error up to Mach 1.5. The 4th order Mach term can be neglected for speeds below Mach 0.85.


See also

* Acronyms and abbreviations in avionics * ICAO recommendations on use of the International System of Units * Calibrated airspeed * Flight instruments *
Global Positioning System The Global Positioning System (GPS), originally Navstar GPS, is a satellite-based radionavigation system owned by the United States government and operated by the United States Space Force. It is one of the global navigation satellite sy ...
* Indicated airspeed * Position error * True airspeed


References


Bibliography

* Anderson, John D. (2007), ''Fundamentals of Aerodynamics'', Section 3.4 (4th edition), McGraw-Hill, New York USA. * Gracey, William (1980)
"Measurement of Aircraft Speed and Altitude"
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210926222531/https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a280006.pdf , date=2021-09-26 (11 MB), NASA Reference Publication 1046.


External links


Equivalent airspeed calculator
Airspeed