“…Assuming incompressible potential flow [19], Wagner and Kussner derived the lift-deficiency functions due to a unitary step change in the angle of attack [20] and a unitary sharp-edged vertical gust [21][22] for a thin flat airfoil in the (reduced) time domain, respectively, while Theodorsen [23] and Sears [24][25] solved the same problems in the (reduced) frequency domain. Based on these very fundamental twodimensional studies [26][27][28], the lift-deficiency functions due to a unitary step change in the angle of attack and a unitary sharp-edged vertical gust [29] have been investigated for thin flat wings of various shapes [30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38], including elliptical [39][40], rectangular [41] swept trapezoidal [42] and delta wings [43], for which panel-based methods are particularly useful [44][45][46][47].…”