The answer to this one is no. Yes a plane does have to be traveling at a certain speed in order to lift into the air. But as long as the aircraft maintains that speed it can either climb or descend. The speed merely determines how fast it climbs.
Take the bird onto a supersonic plane and, while the plane is in flight, have the bird fly around inside the plane.
No. A helicopter is not faster than an airplane. A helicopter could fly at about 400-650 kph. But a plane could fly much faster than that.
The first plane was the experimental Ball X-1.
The X-15
ultra sonic !!
plane because it is higher and faster
No insect can fly faster than a jet plane. The fastest flying insects can travel at 60-70 mph, about the speed cars travel on a highway. By contrast a commercial jet usually flies at over 500 mph.
yes an airliner can fly much!!! faster than it normally can for example the A380 cruises at 565mph its usual max sppeed is 650mph but it can actually go up to 875mph but the plane equipments will get stressed and the plane will loose control.
No, the Tupolev Tu-144 was the only other commercial plane to date to fly faster then the speed of sound.
You can get a plane to fly faster (for a given force applied) by decreasing drag, e.g. reducing the width of the fuselage or wings (the latter also reduces lift). If you add weight to a paper plane, especially at the nose, you can get it to fly faster for a given acceleration (i.e. the throwing motion) -- the additional weight will increase the speed gained as gravity drags the plane down, because the air resistance is a function of the area, not the weight. A metal plane will fall faster (and with a higher terminal velocity) than a paper one if they have the same resistance area.
A fast aeroplane will be faster than any helicopter, but a fast helicopter can be faster than a slow aeroplane.
I do not know