A helicopter cannot fly in a area close to storms like tornadoes or hurricanes. The reason is because the helicopter runs off of a careful balance of the air it is suppressing. If something like a hurricane or tornado are sucking in all the surrounding air, then the tornado couldn't fly. The air being pulled out from the helicopter would cause it to go into a tail spin, and thus smashing into the ground and more than likely killing the pilot and all guests.
1. Paper(when made a paper plane) 2. Clothes (they can fly by wind) 3. Airplane 4.Helicopter 5. Spaceship 6. Glider 7. Flying disc 8. Kite 9. Balloons 10. Rocket 11.Parachute 12.Donno
No, Hydrogen is a gas. The verb "fly" can not be applied to a gas.
Humans cannot fly without technology or equipment. Our bodies are not designed for flight and lack the necessary physical adaptations, such as wings, to allow for sustained flight.
If the lift force is greater than the mass of an object, the object will experience a net upward force causing it to accelerate upwards. This is the principle behind how airplanes and helicopters are able to fly.
Brooms cannot actually fly. The concept of brooms flying comes from folklore and fiction, such as in stories about witches riding broomsticks. In reality, brooms are used for sweeping and cleaning.
People cannot levitate, but they can fly using airplanes and helicopters.
Helicopters are typically designed to fly in the troposphere, which is closer to the Earth's surface. The stratosphere begins at around 10 kilometers above sea level, and helicopters lack the necessary design and power to operate efficiently at that altitude.
They fly helicopters.
Humans! We have developed helicopters, aeroplanes etc to overcome our inability to fly, so we "can't fly", but we can! :-)
You can fly helicopters.
They fly in California.
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.
No
so we can fly
Yes, there are helicopters available.
Helicopters can fly directly up or down.
Some experimental helicopters can fly as fast as 300 mph. However most helicopters in service fly less than 200 mph.