Jet fuel is what powers the jet engine.Its a bit like putting petrol in your car.No fuel then you wont be going anywhere!
Jet fuel is used in jet aircraft while high octane gasoline is used in propeller-driven craft.
av gas for piston engine and aviation turbine fuel [atf] is for jet engined,there are three type of atf jetA,Jet B, and third one is jet A+
Aircraft use either Jet A civil jet fuel, the JP series of military jet fuels, or 100LL aviation gasoline. Ships use "bunker fuel," crude oil, Navy distillate, nuclear power or, in some cases, jet fuel.
jet engines only, piston engines still use petrol. jet engines can burn a range of fuel from LPG. to alcohols and diesel. Good quality petrol is valuable to motorists and possibly runs too hot in a jet engine, kerosene has the most suitable properties
Aviation fuel 100LL.
turbine fuel or aviation fuel
Contrails are the result of both exhaust fumes (jet fuel is similar to diesel fuel) and the effects of extremely hot exhaust gases reacting to the significantly colder atmospheric air.
Small, general aviation type airplanes use avgas (aviation gasoline) which is very similar to automobile fuel. Large jet engines mostly use Jet-A fuel, which is a real nasty substance with a very high octane rating. Military fighter jets mostly use JP4 fuel which is similar to Jet-A but even more combustable.
In the Allied world, Sir Frank Whittle was the prime mover in the development of the jet engine and the jet aircraft. The Nazi Germans were also working on the jet engine but had not got as far as the British.
Jet fuel is kerosene base turbine aviation fuel
Aeroplanes use aviation gasoline (high octane leaded gasoline), Jet A or Jet B (essentially low sulfur kerosene)
No. Jet fuel is closely related to kerosene and diesel fuel.