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Airspeed Vs.
Ground Speed
What's
the Difference Between Airspeed and Ground Speed?
BY PATRICK J. KIGER
Back in
February 2019, a Virgin Atlantic Boeing 787 jet flying over Pennsylvania
in route from Los Angeles to London reached what might seem like an amazing
speed of 801 miles per hour (1,289 kilometers per hour), according to CBS News.
But the speed
record wasn't because that Virgin Atlantic aircraft itself was exceptionally
fast.
Like a sprinter
running with the wind at his back, the aircraft benefited from an exceptionally
fast jet stream, a high-speed wind moving at 231
miles per hour (371.7 kilometers per hour). It was the fastest jet stream in more than 60 years.
As this explainer on the NASA website
details, ground speed is how fast an airplane is traveling, relative to a fixed
point on the ground.
Think of it
this way: Ground speed is how fast an airplane's shadow would move across the
land. If there's a strong wind pushing an aircraft, that's reflected in the
ground speed.
Airspeed, in
contrast, is how fast an airplane is really flying strictly under its own
power, which is calculated by subtracting the wind speed from the ground
speed.
On a perfectly
still day, the airspeed is equal to the ground speed. But if the wind is
blowing in the same direction that the aircraft is moving, the airspeed will be
less than the ground speed.
Airspeed
doesn't just affect airplanes. It also affects our vehicles on the ground.
As this study published in 2013 in the
International Journal of Energy and Environmental Engineering describes, a
car's airspeed on the highway is what really determines its fuel efficiency, rather than ground speed or
the speedometer reading.
NOW THAT'S INTERESTING
As NASA points
out, a kite has a ground speed of 0 miles per hour, because you're holding it
on the end of a string. But since it moves in the air, it has an airspeed
that's equal to the speed of the wind.
Patrick
J. Kiger
has written for HowStuffWorks since 2008 covering a wide array of topics, from
history and politics to pop culture and technology. He worked as a newspaper
reporter for the Pittsburgh Press, and the Orange County Register in
California, where he covered one of the biggest serial murder cases in U.S.
history, and also as a staff writer at Baltimore Magazine. As a freelancer,
Patrick has written for print publications such as GQ, Mother Jones and the Los
Angeles Times, and on the web for National Geographic Channel, Discovery News,
Science Channel and Fast Company, among others. In recent years, he's become
increasingly interested in how technological advances are altering urban life
and the design of cities, and has written extensively on that subject for Urban
Land magazine. In his spare time, Patrick is a longtime martial arts student
and a fan of crime fiction, punk rock and classic Hollywood films.
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