The shape of a paper airplane impacts its performance characteristics, including its glide range.
The wing that has a longer wing cause it could fly longer.
The average range of the Dragonfly paper airplane is listed as 25+ feet.
So it can glide back to earth and land like and airplane.
I can give you several sentences.The plane should glide to a stop.Watch the flying squirrel glide from one tree to the other.The paper airplane will glide right past the teacher's desk!
That would be a function of the glide ratio of the paper airplane in question.
if it is in the air already, it will glide. How far depends on what type of airplane it is.
Yes, weight may affect a paper airplane by increasing its mass. This may alter its glide ratio and change its wing loading.
paper airplanes glide while most real airplanes have a source of propulsion also in a paper air plane you fold, it in a real airplane you weld it together
Here are some creative paper airplane names you can consider: Sky Soarer Aero Arrow Glide Master Wind Whisperer Flight Fury
Generally, this is a matter of individual preference. It is unlikely that one paper airplane design is the best at everything (range, speed, glide ratio, etc.). Many airplanes are claimed to be the best, but these claims are unsubstantiated.
Paper airplanes fly due to the principles of aerodynamics. When a paper airplane is thrown, the shape of its wings and the angle at which it is thrown create lift, which allows the airplane to stay in the air and glide. The force of gravity pulling the airplane down is counteracted by the lift generated by the wings, allowing the airplane to fly.
Fly the airplane at L/Dmax speed. This is also know as best glide. This speed is found in the POH and represents where induced and parasite drags are at there minimal values for the airplane.