The ailerons make the plane bank (turn).
it is the tail of a plane and turns the plane left and right
If the elevators are up, then the plain goes up but if they are down, the plane goes down.
the rudder, elevators, and ailerons steer a airplane.
ailerons bank (turn) an airplane left or right. the only change in altitude. the elevators (witch are located on the rear of a plane) changes your altitude
Ailerons allow the airplane to make barrels rolls. If the left aileron is down, and the right aileron is up, then the plane will do a barrel roll towards the left. If the left aileron is down, and the right aileron is down then the plane will do a barrel roll towards the right.
They control the bank angle. Ailerons are connected to the plane's control column so that when one tilts up the other one tilts down. This causes the wing with the upward-tilted aileron to be pushed down. The plane will turn toward that wing.
Other than the elevators, ailerons, and rudder, airplanes have flaps (which cchange the lift and drag), spoilers (which change the lift, drag, and roll), and slats (which change the lift).
Basically, Wings provide lift to fly Elevators make the plane point(fly) up and down. Ailerons make the plane bank. The rudder turns the nose of the plane.
A plane steers primarily through the use of its ailerons, elevators, and rudder. Ailerons, located on the wings, control roll and allow the aircraft to tilt sideways, while the elevators on the tail control pitch, enabling the nose to rise or fall. The rudder, also on the tail, manages yaw, helping the plane turn left or right. By coordinating these control surfaces, pilots can effectively maneuver the aircraft in flight.
It counteracts adverse yaw caused by the ailerons when banking for a turn. The rudder pedals also steer the plane on the ground.
The pilot adjusted the ailerons to bank the airplane to the left during the turn.