As we all know the CP moves along the chordline when the AOA changes. As the AOA increases, the CP moves forward and vice versa.
One thing that is confusing about the CP is the literature seems to suggest that the CP is a point that is physically special in some way, as if we could detect its position with a CP sensor. However, even if you could actually
see the pressure distribution, you wouldn't be able to tell where the CP was, because it looks just like any other point on the wing. In fact at low angles of attack, it might not even be on the wing. How can this be?
In reality, the CP is something of a fiction that is useful in some circumstances, sort of like the lift vector itself. The forces on a wing are distributed all over the wing and the end aerodynamic result is a summation of all these vector quantities. These forces will produce two effects:
1) Translation (moving up, down, backwards, forwards)
2) Rotation (pitching nose down, nose up)
The translation forces become lift and drag, and we often pretend that they act at specific points on the airplane, when they really don't. However, if we choose the points carefully, our lies generate correct information.
Same thing with the rotational forces (moments). We can calculate these moments around any point on the airplane. Depending on the point, they result will sometimes be negative (nose down pitching) or positive (nose up). The CP is simply the point where the result is
zero. If you were to place the CG on the CP, the aircraft would not need a horizontal tail...as long as the AOA doesn't change. ;-)
Why do we care where the CP is? We generally don't. Contrary to what you read in most places, CP isn't connected with aircraft longitudinal stability. There is a related concept called the
Aerodynamic Center which is located at about the 1/4 chord point on the wing and that doesn't change with AOA. The CG must like ahead of this point for the aircraft to be stable. The CP moves all around with AOA and therefore isn't useful for stability calculations. Consider: if a CG lay ahead of the CP, an increase in AOA might move it in
front of the CG, causing an uncontrollable pitch up. That won't do.
The main point behind all of the above is to communicate that the CP is primarily a mathematical concept, not a physical one, and the same concept will apply even if you want to look at lift from a Newtonian perspective. In fact, you can say that lift is caused by "Lift Demons", if you want to, and there will still be a point on the wing (or off) where the pitching moment is zero.
(Please tell me if this doesn't make any sense at all.)