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An airplane wing produces lift by forcing air downward as it moves through the atmosphere. This downward deflection of air creates a difference in pressure above and below the wing, resulting in an upward lifting force according to Newton's third law of motion. The shape of the wing, or airfoil, helps to enhance this effect by accelerating the airflow over the top surface, further lowering the pressure above the wing.

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3w ago

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How do flaps increase lift on an airplane?

Basically they 'curve' the wing, forcing the airflow to lift more weight.


How does an airplane fly with weight?

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


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.


Can an airplane fly differently by its shape?

To answer your question directly: yes. An aircraft operates by altering the direction and pressure of a fluid (in this case air) to produce lift. Infact, simply put an aircraft designer alters the shape of the aircraft to control these changes in directions and pressures to control how the aircraft produces lift.


How is an airplane able to fly in a level direction?

An airplane flies in a level direction primarily due to the balance between four forces: lift, weight, thrust, and drag. Lift is generated by the wings as air flows over and under them, while weight is the downward force due to gravity. Thrust, provided by the engines, propels the airplane forward, and drag is the resistance encountered due to air friction. When these forces are balanced, the airplane can maintain a steady altitude and fly in a level direction.


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 is The resisting force exerted on an airplane?

Lift opposes gravity and drag opposes thrust. An airplane turns using a small amount of vertical lift vectored in a horizontal direction. gravity from below, the wind currents, atmospheric pressure and weight of the plane from above.


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 force makes an airplane turn?

Simple answer: lift. In typical flight (coordinated) the only force that acts to lift or turn an airplane is lift from the wings, which acts straight up (or perpendicular) from the wings. The tail rudder does not turn an airplane like a rudder on a boat. Instead, to turn an airplane it must raise one wing and lower the other (bank) which alters the vertical component of lift from purely vertical (straight up) to a vector that has vertical and horizontal components (a diagonal). When the pilot pulls back on the stick--increasing lift, the horizontal component of lift changes the direction of the airplanes nose--in effect turning the airplane. An extreme example would be an airplane in 90 degrees of bank or the wings pointing straight up and down relative to the Earth. In this orientation, when the pilot pulls on the stick, increasing lift, all the lift is in the horizontal direction and all the aircraft's lift results in turning the nose of the aircraft horizontally. It's like climbing in the horizontal instead of the vertical.


What two forces keep an airplane in the sky?

An airplane stays in the sky due to lift and thrust. Lift is generated by the air flowing over the wings, creating an upward force that counters the force of gravity. Thrust is the forward force produced by the airplane's engines that propels it through the air.


What is drag for an airplane?

Drag is a force that acts opposite to the direction of movement of an airplane. Drag is mainly caused by air. The other forces that act on the plane while moving in the air are thrust, lift etc..


What causes an airplane to change their velocity and direction?

An airplane changes its velocity and direction by adjusting its engine thrust, moving control surfaces like ailerons, elevators, and rudder, and by banking or pitching the aircraft. These actions alter the lift, thrust, and drag forces acting on the airplane, causing it to accelerate, decelerate, climb, descend, turn, or level off.