The Pietro Terzi Lucy THM was an experimental STOL proof of concept aircraft, designed and built by the Italian aeronautical engineer Pietro Terzi in the late 2000s.
The aircraft was designed to achieve extremely short takeoff and landings (ESTOL), and to fill the gap between the performances of conventional aircraft and that of helicopters.
The fuselage was of the pod and boom type, with the two occupants sitting within an extensively glazed, semi-enclosed cockpit. Rather than being seated, they were to sit astride a saddle, with their legs positioned within a pair of faired protrusions at the base of the cockpit. A tractor engine was located just underneath a boom extending from the top of the fuselage, which powered a 2-blade diameter propeller.
The cantilevered wing had an unusual M-wing planform, with the leading edge being swept forward to its mid-span point, then swept back from there to the wingtip. The wing's trailing edge proscribed an arc of circle profile. The wing did not incorporate slots, flaps, or ailerons. All of the control surfaces were contained within the aircraft's tail, with the tailplane having inboard elevators and outboard elevons. There was a fixed tricycle undercarriage, which was ground adjustable to allow the wing's angle of attack during takeoff to be anywhere between 18ð and 25ð. Terzi anticipated take-off runs of or less. Much of the aircraft was constructed using composites and moulds, with the control surfaces being made from aluminium.
Construction began in 2007, and was completed by February 2009. During March and April 2009, the aircraft was displayed at the Triennale di Milano design museum in Milan, as part of its Serie Fuori Serie exhibition. Ground testing commenced in July 2009 and ended in December 2009. Flight tests were to commence in January 2010, however in July, it was announced that "tests had been completed", without stating that it had flown.