answersLogoWhite

0

12 seconds

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Who invented the first flying airplane and how long did it stay in the air?

Orville wright and Wilbur Wrigt and stayed in the air for 12 seconds


Can an airplane stay in the sky?

I am going to assume that aeroplane=airplane when I answer this. An airplane stays in the air by generating lift on its wings. As long as an airplane can generate sufficent lift it can stay in the air. However once the lift being generated falls below what is required for the plane to stay up... uh oh.


How many seconds did the first airplane last in the air?

The First Airplane Lasted 12 seconds in the air.


How does a wing help an airplane fly?

The wind pushes the airplane helping it to stay in the air and fly.


How can airplane stay up on air?

yh if it has enough petrol


How is an aeroplane able to stay in the air if it is heavier than air?

Yes, as long as the surface area of the airplane was large enough to make the force of air resistance balance with the force of gravity or if the airplane is moving at a fast enough speed to make the air resistance balance with gravity.


How is an airplane able to stay in the air even though the airplane is heavier than the air?

While the airplane moves, the air pushes up against the wings. This has to do with the special shape of the wing, and, to a great part, to Bernoulli's principle.


When was the air warfare invented?

The notion of air warfare was considered long before the first airplane became viable. The first actual use of an airplane in a combat situation happened in 1911, when an Italian pilot dropped bombs on Ottoman troops in Libya.


What was the first air travel device?

An airplane


Does an aluminum airplane stay in the air the longest?

we are having a science fair at my school and I've been trying to figure out if an aluminum airplane stays in the air the longest.if so why?


What the diference between an glider and an airplane?

A glider is an aircraft that does not have an engine and relies on natural forces like wind and gravity for flight. It typically launches from a high point and glides through the air. An airplane, on the other hand, is powered by engines that generate thrust to propel it through the air.


What keeps an airplane up in the sky?

Bernoulli's Principlethe statement that an increase in the speed of a fluid produces a decrease in pressure and a decrease in the speed produces an increase in pressureWind has nothing to do with how an airplane stays in the air. In actuality, an airplane flies better on calm days than on windy ones! It is the act of lift, weight, thrust and Bernoulli's principle (though this principle isn't all that true, since airplanes are able to fly upside down and a model airplane with non-airfoil shaped wings can stay in the air just fine) that determines how an airplane is able to stay in the air.an airplane stays up in the air by the pressure above and below the wings...There is actually more than one force that enables an airplane to stay in the air: that is lift, weight and thrust. Weight has to be less than the force of lift and thrust combined to both get the airplane into the air and keep it in the air.