No, Helicopters cannot fly in Stratosphere. It is too high for them. They do not produce that much lift. But they can fly in the Troposphere.
Helicopters are not very well suited to high altitude flight. By their very nature helicopters less suited for high altitudes than airplanes or balloons. Additionally, since the most common usages of helicopters deals in short hops or other low-altitude duties, modern helicopters aren't designed with high altitude flight in mind. The stratosphere is generally agreed to start at about 30,000 feet altitude. While this is pretty near to the helicopter altitude record (in 2005 an Ecureuil/AStar AS 350 B3 helicopter landed on Mount Everest (29,035 feet)) This is far higher than the ceiling of the average helicopter (10 to 12,000 feet).
No. Helicopters need air to fly. There is no air on the surface of the moon. Therefore helicopters could not fly on the moon.
stratosphere
stratosphere
Helicopters Can fly in the thermosphere and sometimes into space. I am a professor at Cambridge university and i am an expert in helicopter space flights.Call me at 320-567-5667 ^Whoever fking wrote this, I'm laughing so hard rn
The air gets thinner as altitude increases, which in turn decreases the amount of lift an aircraft can get. The air in the stratosphere is far too thing for helicopters and most planes.
They fly helicopters.
Stratosphere
Type your answer here... airplanes fly in the stratosphere to avoid weather problems
Most aircraft do not travel in the stratosphere. Some military and passenger jets fly in the stratosphere, but most aircraft fly in the troposphere, below the stratosphere.
They fly in California.
You can fly helicopters.
There are many different helicopters. Most small civilian helicopters may fly for about an hour, but large passenger or military helicopters can fly for 6 hours or more.
so we can fly
No
They Fly In the Stratosphere. The Stratosphere is the 2 Major Atmosphere
Helicopters can fly directly up or down.