Duh!! It always does. :) :) :) :) ...... Peace out!!
Answer: Of course! :) You mean flying, not floating right? That makes more sense. :)Er...By floating you mean, staying in one place in the air while not moving? No, it cannot.
I am going to assume that aeroplane=airplane when I answer this. An airplane stays in the air by generating lift on its wings. As long as an airplane can generate sufficent lift it can stay in the air. However once the lift being generated falls below what is required for the plane to stay up... uh oh.
it is condensation floating in the sky
Sky Eats Airplane was created in 2005.
try force and motion. its a 8th grade level standard
5x^-2y^10 over 2x^-1(-3x^-3y^-1)^-2
Sky Eats Airplane - album - was created on 2008-07-22.
NO
Depends on what you compare it to. An airplane has to move in relation to the air to stay flying, but it doesn't really care about what the ground is doing. If it's windy enough you can point a slow-flying airplane into the wind and remain flying while not moving in relation to the ground.
yes
No.
That is called hovering.
Meteorites move very quickly - faster than an airplane or a satellite. They also streak across the sky instead of stay in one spot like a star or planet. They are very bright.