An aileron will cause the space craft to roll
Operating the ailerons will cause the aircraft to roll.
aileron
Right Aileron Down is Positive Left Aileron Up is Positive Rudder Left is Positive Elevator Down if Positive The oposites are negative, of course.
Aircraft turn is technically termed as banking. It is achieved by combined work of aileron and rudder...
The aileron is usually on the back of the outter wing, on both wings. Moving the controller to the right, causes the right aileron to lift and the left aileron to go down, thus causing the aircraft to roll to the right. and vice versa.
The elevator is a movable flying surface on the tailplane, it makes the aircraft dive or climb.
The elevator is a movable flying surface on the tailplane, it makes the aircraft dive or climb.
It makes the airframe head up or down.
It is a control surface on the wing of an aircraft. It is used to bank the aircraft on an angle in flight. It is on the trailing outer edge of each wing.
The ailerons, which act in opposite directions, are used to roll the aircraft while in straight line flight, and also to assist in turns, when used with rudder.
The ailerons primarily control roll. Whenever lift is increased, induced drag is also increased. When the stick is moved left to bank the aircraft to the left, the right aileron is lowered which increases lift on the right wing and therefore increases induced drag on the right wing. Using ailerons causes adverse yaw, meaning the nose of the aircraft yaws in a direction opposite to the aileron application. When moving the stick to the left to bank the wings, adverse yaw moves the nose of the aircraft to the right. Adverse yaw is more pronounced for light aircraft with long wings, such as gliders. It is counteracted by the pilot with the rudder. Differential ailerons are ailerons which have been rigged such that the downgoing aileron deflects less than the upward-moving one, reducing adverse yaw. [edit]
It depends on the general construction of the aircraft. Commonly used material are: aluminum, wood, cloth, and fiberglass. BTW, what are slats??