Lift: the force that lifts an object from the ground
Gravity: the force that pulls an object towards the center of the Earth
Thrust: the force that propels or pushes an object forward
Drag: the force that slows down or prevents an object from moving
and this is awesome of how the world spins
and plus always remember that if you find a Dustin treat him nice or he'll eat Ur brains
OH AND HIIII
"Lift" refers to the force that allows an object to move upwards against gravity, typically in the context of aerodynamics or physics. It is generated by the shape and angle of an object, such as an airplane wing. "Left," on the other hand, is a direction indicating the opposite of right on a horizontal plane. The two terms are unrelated in meaning and application.
The British word 'lift' means the same as the American elevator
The word lifted is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "lift".
A lift or pulley that takes a skier from one place on the mountain to the other
Unable is a synonym for can't or can not. Example: "I am unable to lift the stone." is the same as "I can't lift the stone."
The four forces acting on an airplane in flight are lift, weight (or gravity), thrust, and drag. Lift is generated by the wings and opposes the force of gravity. Thrust is produced by the engines and overcomes the force of drag, which is caused by air resistance.
Well, there obviously gravity and lift. But there are two more. They are drag and thrust. Gravity operates all the time. Then you give thrust to the aircraft, to create lift, and drag will automatically operate. Gravity pulls you down, lift pushes you up, drag slows you down and thrust accelerates you. Gravity and drag are both bad for launch. Lift and thrust are absolutely essential for launch. So there you have it. Gravity, Lift, Thrust, Drag
Thrust, Drag, Lift, Weight (Gravity).
Lift, Gravity, thrust and drag
Thrust from the helicopter's rotor blades generates lift, which enables the helicopter to overcome gravity and stay airborne. Drag acts as a resistance opposing the helicopter's forward movement, requiring additional thrust to maintain speed. Gravity affects the helicopter by constantly pulling it downward, necessitating continuous lift to counteract and remain in the air.
thrust drag lift and gravity
There are four forces that act on an airplane that keeps it at a level altitude. Thrust, drag, weight, and lift determine whether a pilot flies at a level altitude.
lift, thrust, drag and weight(gravity)
By overcoming gravity with lift and drag with thrust.
Thrust, lift, gravity, and drag
Essentially there are 4 aerodynamic forces that act on an airplane in flight; these are lift, drag, thrust and gravity (or weight).In simple terms, drag is the resistance of air (the backward force), thrust is the power of the airplane's engine (the forward force), lift is the upward force and gravity is the downward force. So for airplanes to fly, the thrust must be greater than the drag and the lift must be greater than the gravity (so as you can see, drag opposes thrust and lift opposes gravity).This is certainly the case when an airplane takes off or climbs. However, when it is in straight and level flight the opposing forces of lift and gravity are balanced. During a descent, gravity exceeds lift and to slow an airplane drag has to overcome thrust.
The four forces that act on a plane in flight are lift, weight (gravity), thrust, and drag. Lift is generated by the wings to overcome gravity (weight), while thrust from the engines propels the plane forward to overcome drag, which is the resistance of the air against the forward motion of the aircraft.