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  2. Pitot tube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitot_tube

    This example, from an Airbus A380, combines a pitot tube (right) with a static port and an angle-of-attack vane (left). Air-flow is right to left. Types of pitot tubes A pitot-static tube connected to a manometer Pitot tube on Kamov Ka-26 helicopter A Formula One car during testing with frames holding many pitot tubes Location of pitot tubes on ...

  3. File:Pitot tube types.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pitot_tube_types.svg

    English: Types of pitot tubes. Examples of pitot tube, static tube, and pitot-static tube. עברית: ...

  4. Pitot–static system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitot–static_system

    Airspeed indicator diagram showing pressure sources from both the pitot tube and the static port The pitot–static system obtains pressures for interpretation by the pitot–static instruments. While the explanations below explain traditional, mechanical instruments, many modern aircraft use an air data computer (ADC) to calculate airspeed ...

  5. Venturi effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venturi_effect

    A flow of air through a pitot tube Venturi meter, showing the columns connected in a manometer and partially filled with water. The meter is "read" as a differential pressure head in cm or inches of water. Video of a Venturi meter used in a lab experiment Idealized flow in a Venturi tube

  6. Airspeed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airspeed

    The pitot-static system comprises one or more pitot probes (or tubes) facing the on-coming air flow to measure pitot pressure (also called stagnation, total or ram pressure) and one or more static ports to measure the static pressure in the air flow. These two pressures are compared by the ASI to give an IAS reading.

  7. Rayleigh flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rayleigh_flow

    This indicates that cooling, instead of heating, causes the Mach number to move from 0.845 to 1.0 This is not necessarily correct as the stagnation temperature always increases to move the flow from a subsonic Mach number to M = 1, but from M = 0.845 to M = 1.0 the flow accelerates faster than heat is added to it.

  8. Stagnation pressure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stagnation_Pressure

    The two points of interest are 1) in the freestream flow at relative speed where the pressure is called the "static" pressure, (for example well away from an airplane moving at speed ); and 2) at a "stagnation" point where the fluid is at rest with respect to the measuring apparatus (for example at the end of a pitot tube in an airplane).

  9. Position error - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Position_error

    The pitot tube supplies pressure to the airspeed indicator. Pitot pressure is equal to stagnation pressure providing the pitot tube is aligned with the local airflow, it is located outside the boundary layer, and outside the wash from the propeller.