How can airplanes manage to fly?
I mean they are just big heavy metal parts how can they stay in the air
I mean they are just big heavy metal parts how can they stay in the air
I wanted to go to Ethiopia for 1 month and actually wanted to book the ticket with another travel agency, Because it cost 630€ with both Egypt Airlines and Turkish Airlines at the time I wanted to fly. I went to an Ethiopian travel agency (which actually only deals with tourist visas), but she said…
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/3NrFsAjughA?feature=share That's an SR72 darkstar, right?
What did you experience? Were you at the airport yesterday or today? How were the wait times? Did you take someone there? How did you feel? Now, before the holidays.
Hi, I'm flying to Greece with my parents in a week and would like to know if I can take rolling equipment (tobacco, papers, filters) with me without my parents noticing at the security check, as I'm still a minor, and if so, where should I put it in my hand luggage or suitcase?
First of all, it doesn't concern me personally. Info: A ticket was purchased but it is not correct. Everything on the ticket is only in Turkish and was probably purchased in the destination country. But the ticket was incorrect, so a new flight was purchased and money was unfortunately paid again. Is there anything I…
Hello, we are flying to Turkey on Friday and applied for new passports for the children about seven weeks ago, but they are still not ready and I doubt they will be issued by Friday! Now my question, has anyone recently traveled to Istanbul with an expired passport and were there any problems? Please only…
Hello Littelcreepycat,
Planes have, you may have seen it, wings. When an aircraft is moving, a flow is present both below and above the wing. This creates a lift that allows the aircraft to be lifted. A prerequisite for this is a certain speed. If a 10km/h roadplane moves forward, the generated lift is not enough to lift. The more speed the aircraft now has and the greater the area of the wing, the more lift is generated. If the wing surface is larger, the aircraft will lift at lower speeds and vice versa.
By the way, you can try it yourself:
If you keep your arm out of the window without tightening your muscles, it just falls down like a wet bag. If you drive, for example, 150km/h, your arm and your palm are out of the car, by forming a straight wing with your hand, your arm will remain up without you tightening it. This also works with the aircraft, only that they need more speed. In the case of aircraft usually around 280 km/h.
Love
Bela
Physics in everyday life! Always exciting…
https://www.planet-wissen.de/technik/luftfahrt/flag_nach_dem_vorbild_der_natur/pwiewarumfliegeeinair100.html
But if you had found yourself with Google!
Because the buoyancy is stronger than gravity, only so it creates a plane to fly.
I guess you better watch physics, or you don’t have to look for anything at a school.
There are not “just” heavy metal parts that do nothing but stand on the ground.
But they move through the air, through the air flow there is a force on the wings that pulls the plane up…
…and if this force is stronger upwards than the weight force downwards, the aircraft will lift off.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/auftrieb
They yell at the ground so much that he gets scared. That’s why planes are so loud.
Dumme questions get stupid answers, the classic, thanks for the laugh.
The world can still surprise you.
Aerodynamics
Berne