In aerodynamics, drag is the resistive force that acts opposite to the direction of motion of an aircraft through air. It is composed primarily of two major components:
- Induced Drag
- Zero-lift Drag (Parasite Drag)
Understanding these components is essential for analyzing performance, optimizing aircraft design, and minimizing fuel consumption.
1. Total Drag
The total drag () on an aircraft in flight is the sum of:
Where:
= Induced drag
= Zero-lift drag (or parasite drag)
2. Zero-Lift Drag (
)
2.1 Definition
Zero-lift drag is the drag experienced by the aircraft when no lift is being produced. It is caused by:
- Skin friction
- Form (pressure) drag
- Interference drag
It does not depend on the generation of lift, and occurs even if the aircraft is flying at zero angle of attack (e.g., in a wind tunnel test without lift).
2.2 Characteristics
- Depends primarily on aircraft shape, surface area, and airspeed.
- Increases rapidly with speed:
Where:
= Zero-lift drag coefficient
= Wing reference area
3. Induced Drag (
)
3.1 Definition
Induced drag arises as a by-product of lift generation. It is caused by:
- Downwash created by the wing.
- Tip vortices that tilt the lift vector rearward.
It is most significant at low speeds and high angles of attack, such as during takeoff and landing.
3.2 Derivation
Induced drag is related to lift:
Or using coefficients:
Where:
= Lift coefficient
= Oswald efficiency factor (typically 0.7–0.9)
= Aspect ratio of the wing
3.3 Characteristics
- Increases with the square of lift coefficient:
Inversely proportional to:
- Aspect Ratio (AR): High-AR wings produce less induced drag.
- Speed squared (
): Induced drag decreases rapidly with speed.
Thus, is dominant at low speeds and high lift conditions.
4. Total Drag Polar
The total drag coefficient () is often expressed as:
This is known as the drag polar equation. It shows that total drag is a combination of:
- A constant term: zero-lift drag (
)
- A variable term: induced drag (
)
5. Trade-off Between Induced and Zero-Lift Drag
- At low speeds:
- Lift coefficient
is high → induced drag dominates.
- Lift coefficient
- At high speeds:
is low → induced drag decreases.
- Zero-lift drag increases with
.
There exists an optimal speed (or angle of attack) where total drag is minimized — corresponding to maximum lift-to-drag ratio ().
6. Practical Implications
- Long wings (high AR): Reduce induced drag → more efficient for gliders and high-altitude UAVs.
- Streamlined shapes: Reduce parasite drag → important for high-speed aircraft.
- Efficient flight planning: Choose speeds where total drag is minimized (best range and endurance).
7. Summary
Drag Type | Depends On | Dominant At | Mitigation Strategies |
---|---|---|---|
Induced Drag | ![]() | Low speeds | Increase aspect ratio, use winglets |
Zero-Lift Drag | ![]() ![]() | High speeds | Streamlined design, reduce surface area |
Understanding and managing both induced and zero-lift drag is essential for optimizing aircraft performance, improving fuel efficiency, and designing efficient aerodynamic configurations.