Use | Air force ensign |
---|---|
Proportion | 1:2 |
Adopted | 6 May 1982 |
Design | A field of air force blue with the Union Jack in the canton, the Commonwealth Star below the Union Flag with a clockwise Southern Cross in the fly and a modified RAF roundel in the lower fly. |
Use | Air force ensign |
Proportion | 1:2 |
Adopted | 1949 |
Relinquished | 1982 |
Design | A field of air force blue with the Union Jack in the canton, the Commonwealth Star below the Union Flag with the Southern Cross in the fly and a RAF roundel in the lower fly. |
Use | Air force ensign |
Proportion | 1:2 |
Adopted | 24 July 1922 |
Relinquished | 1948 |
Design | A sky blue field defaced with the RAF Roundel and the Union Flag in the canton. |
The Royal Australian Air Force Ensign is used by the Royal Australian Air Force and the Australian Air Force Cadets in Australia. It may also be flown on Air Force aircraft overseas. It is based on the Australian national flag, with the field changed to Air Force blue, and the southern cross tilted clockwise to make room for the RAAF roundel (which itself is a modified RAF roundel) inserted in the lower fly quarter. The roundel is a red leaping kangaroo on white within a dark blue ring. The ensign was proclaimed as a Flag of Australia under section 5 of the Flags Act on 6 May 1982.[1]
The southern cross is tilted so that Gamma Crucis stays in the same position as for the Australian National Flag and that Alpha Crucis is moved along the x-axis towards the hoist by one-sixth of the width of the flag. This results in the axis being rotated 14.036° clockwise around Gamma Crucis and each star is rotated in this way,[2] although the constellation as a whole is not simply rotated.