Lifting Line Theory
Basic Theory
We could try using 2-D flow results for each section, but correct them for
the influence of the trailing vortex wake and its downwash. This is the
idea of lifting line theory.
We use the 2-D result that:

together with the relation:

to obtain:

But the angle of attack used here is reduced through the effects of downwash
so that the effective angle of attack is the true angle* minus the downwash
angle:

Where the induced downwash, Wind, is given by the Biot-Savart Law:

Combining the expression for gamma:

with the expression for the downwash angle:

provides an integral equation for the circulation distribution along the
wing.
Just as in thin airfoil theory, the integral equation can be solved by assuming
a Fourier series representation for the distribution.

Substitution of the expression for circulation into the integral equation
leads to:

After integrating we have:

The solution of this equation for all values of y is not quite so easy as
in the case of thin airfoil theory where we could get closed form expressions
for the An's. This is generally done numerically. However, several interesting
and simple results appear from this analysis without ever actually computing
the An's from the distribution of local angle of attack. Some of these
are discussed in the next section.
Elliptic Wing Results
If, for example, we represent the lift distribution with only a single term
in the Fourier series, then:

This represents an elliptic distribution of lift.
The downwash angle is, in this case:

The integral is constant when |y| < b/2.
In this domain:

Since the downwash distribution is constant the Cl distribution is just:

If the angle of attack is also constant along the wing (no twist) then the
Cl is constant and since:

Then in this case the section Cl is equal to the wing CL and:

or:

Recall that this holds for unswept elliptical wings.
General Lift Distributions
If we are given the lift distribution we can compute the An's as we would
with any Fourier expansion. And once we know the Fourier coefficients,
we may compute the downwash distribution and the induced drag:

Substitution and evaluation of the definite integral** leads to:

This formula gives the downwash in the plane of the wing for arbitrary load
distributions. For the simple elliptical case, closed form solutions for
the downwash and sidewash at the start of the wake sheet exist. The simple
relation for the velocity induced by an elliptic wing tailing vortex sheet
is:

Here, the variable Z is the complex coordinate y + iz and wo is the downwash
at the wing root: y = z = 0.
This formula permits computation of induced velocities behind a wing as
they effect downstream surfaces such as horizontal tails.

Note that the downwash is only constant in the plane of the wing and behind
the wing. As we move outboard of the wing or out of the plane of the wake,
the downwash varies considerably and there is a rather large upwash beyond
the wing tips.
This downwash field produces several important effects. It changes the
lift of surfaces in other surfaces wakes. This is important in the analysis
of airplane stability and the effectiveness of horizontal tails. As can
be seen from the downwash plot, the interference of a canard wake with a
wing is extreme: the wing lift is reduced behind the canard and the part
of the wing outboard of the canard has increased lift.
The downwash also produces induced drag as discussed in the next section.
*Note that what we have called the geometric angle of attack
is just that for flat plates but it is, in general, the angle of attack
from zero lift.
**The integral is not in all tables of integrals. It is sometimes called
the Glauert integral and is given, for example, in Kuethe and Chow page
146.