yes
"The landing system on an aircraft carrier can stop a 54,000 pound airplane traveling at 150 mph in two seconds." Also, the aircraft carrier is often moving away from the landing aircraft (allowing a greater true air speed for the landing airplane.) Suppose the aircraft carrier is going 15 mph, then the 54,000 pound aircraft can land at a true airspeed of 165 mph.
the first true naval aircraft in sight of the aircraft carrier operations would be the sopwith pup, used by the royal navy in aircraft carrier testing. in terms of the first catapult aircraft, it would be USS North Carolina during the great war. it was the first official successful ship-bound launch. try typing it into Google, that might help. don't be lazy
The British built the first true aircraft carrier in 1918. Earlier aircraft carriers were cruisers with wooden platforms built over their decks for airplane runways. The first landing of a plane on a ship was made by Eugene Ely when he landed on a platform on the cruiser Pennsylvania in 1911.
True
An F-16 is a Fighting Falcon, unless it is an F-16N, used by the Navy, which is a Viper. It is true that the Navy used the F-16N, however, "Viper" is simply a nickname given to the aircraft by those around it. Fighting Falcon and Viper can be used interchangeably for all models of the F-16.
The duration of True to the Navy is 1.18 hours.
True to the Navy was created on 1930-05-25.
The limitations of early aircraft included very little fuel for over-water operations far from land, which included searches that could be very time-consuming. The first solution was to use seaplanes, and later to launch these aircraft from large ships, such as the scout aircraft aboard battleships. But true aircraft carriers could travel to any location and serve as a floating airfield from which to launch aerial missions, in peacetime and wartime. - The first aircraft flown from a ship actually preceded the Wright Brothers, but was uncontrolled and had no pilot. Samuel Langley launched his steam-powered Aerodrome Number Five off a houseboat in the Potomac River on May 6, 1896. In 1903, a piloted version failed to fly. - Aviation pioneer Eugene Ely was the first to take off from a ship (USS Birmingham) in 1910. He became the first to land on a ship when he landed on a platform on the cruiser USS Pennsylvania in 1911. - In December 1911, the French Navy ship Foudre became the first seaplane carrier, but no planes took off or landed aboard the ship itself. - The British built the first dedicated aircraft carrier in 1914, the HMS Ark Royal.
Ramon Magsaysay first brought true freedom to the Philippine.
true and false it depends
True
True to the Navy - 1930 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Passed (National Board of Review)