Gravity, force and lift are all forces that cause an airplane to fly. There are more forces depending on what time of airplane is in flight. For example the forces used to keep a comerical jet as to a fighter or military jet. As there are many forces the same the proportion is different there for the air flow if different on each airplane.
The 4 forces that let a airplane fly are Lift, Gravity, Thrust, and Drag.
The 'cause' of the first aircraft was men wanting to fly.
Thrust and Lift. Gravity and drag make planes more difficult to fly.
Yes, weight opposes lift and is one of the four forces
The airplane fly on the air by 4 main forces ( drag , lift , thrust and weight ) all these forces affect of the performances of the airplane to fly . - the high power of the engine gave a high speed to the airplane on the runway - the design of the wings make the air pressure down the wings is less than the air pressure up the wing ... this make the airplane fly Answered by Alaa Eddin Abd Ellatef Airport Duty Officer Luxor Airport 02 0100 70 42 073
Can you fly on airplane with pericarditis
An object can fly when the forces of lift and thrust are greater than the forces of weight and drag. Lift is generated by the shape of the object (such as wings on an airplane) and thrust is the force that propels the object forward.
For an airplane to fly, it must always engage in a tug of war between the opposing forces of lift versus weight and thrust versus drag.
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.
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The wind pushes the airplane helping it to stay in the air and fly.