answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What part of the airplane produces lift?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How does an airplane fly with weight?

An airplane produces enogh lift to fly with weight. Cargo planes are designed to do that.


What is a camber on a airplane?

The camber on a wing refers to the curvature of the wing. A high camber means the wing is thick and produces more lift but flies slower. A low camber means the wing is thinner, produces less lift but flies much faster.


What Parts of an airplane which provide lift and support entire weight of airplane?

The wings are the primary source of lift for an airplane. The horizontal stabilizer of most modern transport aircraft produces lift also, but the lift vector of the stabilizer is usually in the opposite direction (down) in order to keep the aircraft at the proper pitch attitude. Some aircraft configurations are designed so that the aircraft body itself provides lift. The Space Shuttle is an example of a "lifting body" aircraft.


What is the lifting part of an airplane?

Nothing really, its the air flow under the wings that provide lift.


How airplane float in air?

Floating of airplane in the air is called Hovering. This is a technique used by only some kind of aircrafts. This technique uses a small engine under the aircraft which produces lift when needed.


What two forces keep an airplane in the sky?

Lift, caused by one air stream flowing over the wing, and another flowing under it, that produces lift, and drag, or the resistance of the air to anything moving through it.


What force that causes an airplane to rise?

Lift is the force that causes an airplane to rise. Lift is caused by the flowing of air under the wings. This causes the airplane to rise.


What keeps an airplane up in the sky?

Bernoulli's Principlethe statement that an increase in the speed of a fluid produces a decrease in pressure and a decrease in the speed produces an increase in pressureWind has nothing to do with how an airplane stays in the air. In actuality, an airplane flies better on calm days than on windy ones! It is the act of lift, weight, thrust and Bernoulli's principle (though this principle isn't all that true, since airplanes are able to fly upside down and a model airplane with non-airfoil shaped wings can stay in the air just fine) that determines how an airplane is able to stay in the air.an airplane stays up in the air by the pressure above and below the wings...There is actually more than one force that enables an airplane to stay in the air: that is lift, weight and thrust. Weight has to be less than the force of lift and thrust combined to both get the airplane into the air and keep it in the air.


What is the difference how a helacopter creates lift and an airplane?

They both utilize airflow over an airfoil. The helicopter moves the airfoil (blade) by spinning them, as air passes around the blade it creates lift. An airplane uses thrust from the engines to push the airfoil (wings) forward through the air, the air then flowing over(lower pressure) and under them (higher pressure) produces lift.


How friction effect the flight of an airplane?

Friction is the force resisting the movement of an object across a surface. For an airplane there is no friction when it is flying. Instead this is referred to as air resistance which produces drag forces. There are several forces acting on the airplane at one time: Thrust, Drag, Lift, and Gravity.


What happens when an airplane takes off against the wind?

It then produces lift due to wing configuration and can take off


What holds an airplane up?

lift