• Question: what makes a plane to fly?

    Asked by AISHER MUSER to Bernerd, Erick, Joseph, Ken, Peter on 12 Jul 2017. This question was also asked by 329ngrj1723.
    • Photo: Joseph Olwendo

      Joseph Olwendo answered on 12 Jul 2017:


      planes fly due to pressure gradient created by airstream (wind) blowing above the plane and that from below the plane. the plane is always made to ensure that the two streams of air will move at different speeds hence difference in pressure which results to an uplift. this is what we call the Bernouli equation.

    • Photo: Bernerd Fulanda

      Bernerd Fulanda answered on 14 Jul 2017:


      Hello Aisher Muser,
      Let me try to explain in simple terms
      If you watch plane taking off or landing, the first thing you notice is the noise of the engines; but its not the engines that make it fly,things can fly without engines, as gliders (planes with no engines), paper planes, and indeed birds
      So, why/how do planes fly?
      A plane’s engines are designed to move it forward at high speed = that makes air flow rapidly over the wings, which throw the air down toward the ground, generating an upward force called LIFT (and the plane takes off) because the LIFT is greater than the weight of the plane and therefore holds holds it in the sky, making it fly
      So it’s the engines that move a plane forward, while the wings move it upward.

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