It depends on the mass of the plane. The heavier the plane, the more lift it needs.
Paper airplanes fly due to the principles of aerodynamics. When a paper airplane is thrown, the shape of its wings and the angle at which it is thrown create lift, which allows the airplane to stay in the air and glide. The force of gravity pulling the airplane down is counteracted by the lift generated by the wings, allowing the airplane to fly.
Paper airplanes fly due to the principles of aerodynamics. When thrown, the shape and design of the paper airplane create lift, which is the force that allows it to stay in the air. The wings of the paper airplane are designed to generate lift by creating a pressure difference between the top and bottom surfaces of the wings. This lift, along with the thrust generated by the initial throw, allows the paper airplane to fly through the air.
An object can fly when the forces of lift and thrust are greater than the forces of weight and drag. Lift is generated by the shape of the object (such as wings on an airplane) and thrust is the force that propels the object forward.
It is thrust, lift, drag and weightthat affect an aircraft's ability to fly. It is thrust that moves the aircraft forward through the air. The thrust overcomes drag and provides (with the wings) lift to overcome weight.
No, an airplane requires both wings to provide lift and stability. Additionally, the propeller is powered by the engine, which would likely be on the missing wing. Without both wings and the engine, the airplane would not be able to maintain controlled flight.
An airplane produces enogh lift to fly with weight. Cargo planes are designed to do that.
the difference between an helicopter creating lift and an airplane creating lift is simple. an airplane creates lift by moving forward and its wing that has an aerofoil shaped will create lift. this gives the lift for the airplane and to fly. for helicopters, instead of the aerofoil is fix like an airplane, the aerofoil wing is rotating and create lift. that is why the helicopter does not need to move forward to gain momentum to create lift. by rotating the aerofoil (the blade) the helicopter can creates enough lift to lift up the helicopter.and that's how it fly..
The 4 forces that let a airplane fly are Lift, Gravity, Thrust, and Drag.
No. Airplanes need the flow of air over the wings in order to produce lift.
Lift! The wings on a plane create an upward lift.
Lift
No, airplanes need wings for lift. - Now having said that, aircraft can fly without wings, as they include helicopters, dirigibles and balloons which have alternate ways of gaining lift.
Paper airplanes fly due to the principles of aerodynamics. When a paper airplane is thrown, the shape of its wings and the angle at which it is thrown create lift, which allows the airplane to stay in the air and glide. The force of gravity pulling the airplane down is counteracted by the lift generated by the wings, allowing the airplane to fly.
Lift created from wind under the wings
Lift keeps an aircraft up, thrust pushes it forward.
Thrust, lift, gravity, and drag
The larger the wing, the more lift the airplane gets, as a general rule of thumb. When you have more lift, you can slow down and not waste as much gas. If you have more gas, you can fly some more.