A bird flies by the use of its wings. Air is pushed downward by the wings. The air then reacts by pushing the bird upward.
please, i need an answer
The main forces acting on a bird in flight are gravity, drag caused by wind resistance as it moves through the air, and lift produced by the motion of its wings that keep it up. A bird on the ground is mostly just affected by gravity.
slow flying bird
Slow flying birds
No even though it can fly the Flying squirrel is not a Bird it is a Mammal.
Flying High Bird Sanctuary was created in 2002.
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.Example: The flying motion of birds is a good example of the Newton's third law. The wings push the air downwards. In turn the air reacts by pushing the wings (and therefore the bird) upwards. The size of the force on the air equals the size of the force on the bird; the direction of the force on the air which is downwards is opposite the direction of the force on the bird which is upward. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Tricky Question: Consider what happens when a small car collides with a heavy truck. Does the truck exert more force on the car, or does the car exert more force on the truck? Answer: Neither. They both exert the same amount of force on each other (Newton's Third Law). The car's acceleration is more dramatic because the same force is being applied to a smaller mass.
a bird
yes
A 0.52 kg bird flying at an altitude of 550 m
They enable it to see.
long range