AIM ¶ 7-3-3 — Cold Temperature Baro-VNAV Effects
AIM 7-3-3 explains how non-standard temperatures affect baro-VNAV descent paths, RNAV approach minima, and uncompensated baro-VNAV chart note limits.
Baro-VNAV systems calculate vertical guidance using barometric altitude, which is affected by temperature. Because the system assumes a standard atmosphere, non-standard temperatures distort the actual descent path:
- Colder than standard: shallower descent angle and reduced descent rate (path is lower than indicated).
- Warmer than standard: steeper angle and increased descent rate.
These effects matter most at high-altitude or terrain-challenged airports and in low visibility, where they can change power settings, sight picture, and approach minima.
To protect against these errors, 14 CFR Part 97 IAPs include an uncompensated baro-VNAV chart note specifying a temperature range:
- On an RNAV (GPS) approach, the note applies only to the LNAV/VNAV line of minima. If the actual temperature is outside the range, uncompensated aircraft cannot use LNAV/VNAV.
- On an RNAV (RNP) approach, the note applies to the entire procedure — uncompensated aircraft can't fly it outside the range.
The baro-VNAV temperature range is independent of Cold Temperature Airport (CTA) corrections, though both may apply on the same approach. CTA corrections are not applied in the final segment, and ILS glideslopes and WAAS glidepaths are unaffected by cold temperatures.