well........ if you look at a shapes of a bird wings it is a bit the same and tht will give you the answer
As an airplane moves forward a vacuum forms on top of the wing. That vacuum lifts the airplane off the ground and into the air.
he engine is accelerared and the airplane moves down the runway gaining sped. When speed is high enough, 'lift' is created around the wings and it lifts off the ground.
Get off the ground. i.e. In an Airplane.
This varies greatly from airplane to airplane, as well as according to ground wind conditions. Keep in mind that landspeed does not matter to an airplane nearly as much as AIRspeed. For example, your typical 4-seater single engine airplane takes off at around 60mph airspeed. Given a 20mph headwind, this aircraft could take off at 40mph GROUND speed. If you are interested in how fast the ground is wizzing by when youre looking out the window of the airliner. Most airliners take off at around 150 to 180 mph AIRspeed.
Moving an airplane on the ground is called 'taxiing'
It then produces lift due to wing configuration and can take off
For an airplane taking off I believe that would be a combination of Bernoulli's principle and ground effect.
An airplane taking off has kinetic energy, which is the energy an object possesses due to its motion. As the airplane accelerates down the runway and gains speed, it builds up kinetic energy that is then used to lift off the ground and continue its flight.
When an airplane takes off, passengers will feel the acceleration and lift off of the plane as it leaves the ground. Sometimes this can make passengers nervous, or as it receives elevation, it can make peoples ears pop.
A wing lifts an airplane off the ground through the Bernoulli's principle, where the shape of the wing creates a pressure difference between the upper and lower surfaces. This pressure difference generates lift, which counteracts the force of gravity and allows the airplane to become airborne.
This is to allow the airplane to rotate when it is taking off. (Rotating is when the pilot pulls back, raises the nose of the aircraft, and the aircraft rises into the air). If the aircraft did not have this raised tail-end, a "tail-strike" would happen, which damages the aircraft.
An airplane was named an airplane because it fly's in the AIR and the came up with the word plane. IDK im going out on a limb here but i believe plane comes from geometry, where you have the plane of a surface. the surface in reference is the ground. a flat surface in which it takes off from.