answersLogoWhite

0

The engine causes thrust, it moves the aircraft.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What causes an airplane to accelerate?

An airplane accelerates due to the thrust generated by its engines. As the engines produce forward thrust, the aircraft gains speed. The thrust must overcome drag forces acting on the airplane to achieve acceleration.


How are lift and thrust use in airplane?

Thrust is used to make it roll forward. This forward motion causes lift at the wings.


Which four forces causes a airplane to become airborne?

There are two forces that causes an airplane to be airborne. They are Thrust and Lift. The other two forces resists the airplane's flight. They are Gravity and Drag.


What provides thrust to a real airplane?

The thrust is an airplane is provided by the engines.


How does thrust have an effect on an airplane?

Thrust causes an aircraft to roll forward, gaining wind pressure over the wings. When wind pressure is sufficient this will lift the aircraft.


What does thrust do to an airplane?

Thrust drives an aircraft forward.


What forward movement force of airplane provided by engines causes air to move over and under wings?

thrust


How does an airplane generate thrust?

power


What forward movement force of airplace provided by engines causes air to move over and under wings?

Thrust is the forward movement of an airplane that is provided by the engines. The thrust causes air to move over and under the wings and allows the plane to fly.


How much thrust does an airplane give?

The amount of thrust depends on the power of the engine


Is the upward force on a airplane wing is thrust?

Thrust is the forward motion of the airplane provided by the engines. Lift is the upward force on an airplanes wing.


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.