if it aint regulated you would suffercate
Yes, airplanes fought in the air, and battleships, cruisers and submarines fought at sea and under it.
less oxegen levels and air pressure.
The interior of the cabin is pressurised.
In an FMVSS121 compliant air brake system, cut out pressure is between 115 - 130 psi, with a cut-in pressure of no more than 25 psi below cut-out pressure. The 90 psi figure is what the brake chambers are regulated at, not the entire system.
It is because an aeroplane's cabin is pressurized, meaning that it is sealed off from the atmosphere. This prevents air escaping and keeps the pressure constant.
Airplanes are designed to generate lift through the shape of their wings and the speed at which they move through the air. This lift force is created by the pressure difference between the upper and lower surfaces of the wings. By generating enough lift, airplanes can overcome gravity and stay airborne even though they are heavier than air.
No. Airplanes need air to fly. The wing shape when passing through the air, creates more pressure on the bottom of the wing than on the top creating lift. In space there is no air and so airplanes will not work.
Because the air moving above the wing is of lower pressure than the bottom. This pressure differential is what creates lift. Check out Bernoulli's Principle for more information.
Airplanes are NOT "suspended in mid air" - they move through the air and are supported by 'lift' derived from the differential air pressure above and below their wings.
NO, airplanes have to keep moving in the air.
Planes stay in flight because of bernoulli's principle. When air passes over a airplanes wing. The air that goes on the top of the wing moves faster than the air the goes on the bottom. Thsi auses a low pressure system above the wing and a high pressure system beneath the wing. The high pressure below the wing pushes the airplane up allowing it to fly.
Airplanes differ in air new zealand they have small domestic airplanes and large international airplanes.