the aerodynamics is the stupid answer that no one knows
E. L. Houghton has written: 'Further aerodynamics for engineering students' -- subject(s): Aerodynamics 'Further aerodynamics for engineering student' -- subject(s): Aerodynamics 'Aerodynamics for engineering students' -- subject(s): Aerodynamics, Airplanes, Design and construction
Alec Eiffel
Hydrodynamics are water dynamites: you use it to blow things up using water. Aerodynamics are air explosives: you use it to blow things up using air.
Jack N. Nielsen has written: 'Missile aerodynamics'
Lawrence J. DeChant has written: 'Simplified, inverse, ejector design tool' -- subject(s): Aerodynamics
Usually yes...but it depends on the angle of trajectory, weight and aerodynamics of the thing being catapulted, the length of the "arm" of the catapult, and the amount of force that the catapult is set to hurl the object. Example: a feather on the 10lb catapult which is set at a high trajectory and a low force will go almost nowhere while a stone from a 3 pound catapult will go much farther if it is set on a perfect trajectory and maximum force.
catapult
you make a catapult!
Aerodynamics
Catapult is a noun.
A Trebuchet Catapult
where was the catapult used
A mangonel is a kind of catapult.
A mangonel is a catapult, not a bridge.
how did you incresed the accuacy of your catapult
They used the catapult for war.
Who invented the rocket Catapult