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- Airplane - Wikipedia
Airplanes come in a variety of sizes, shapes, and wing configurations The broad spectrum of uses for airplanes includes recreation, transportation of goods and people, military, and research
- Airplane! (1980) - IMDb
After the crew becomes sick with food poisoning, a neurotic ex-fighter pilot must safely land a commercial airplane full of passengers
- Airplane | Definition, Types, Mechanics, Facts | Britannica
An airplane is any of a class of fixed-wing aircraft that is heavier than air, propelled by a screw propeller or a high-velocity jet, and supported by the dynamic reaction of the air against its wings Learn more about the different types of airplanes as well as their construction
- How Airplanes Work - HowStuffWorks
In this article, we'll walk through the basic principles of aviation and the various forces at work in any given flight Airplanes take advantage of four forces Drop a stone into the ocean and it will sink into the deep Chuck a stone off the side of a mountain and it will plummet as well
- How planes work | the science of flight - Explain that Stuff
Thanks to their successful experiments with powered flight, the airplane is rightfully recognized as one of the greatest inventions of all time Let's take a closer look at how it works!
- Parts of Airplane - NASA
The airplane shown on this slide is a turbine-powered airliner which has been chosen as a representative aircraft For any airplane to fly, you must lift the weight of the airplane itself, the fuel, the passengers, and the cargo The wings generate most of the lift to hold the plane in the air
- How Physics Explains Airplanes: The Science of Flight
When an airplane moves through the air, it doesn’t just slice through empty space—it manipulates a sea of fluid particles, creating motion and lift This realm of physics is called fluid dynamics, and it’s essential to every aspect of flight
- Airplane - New World Encyclopedia
A fixed-wing aircraft, commonly called an airplane or aeroplane, (from the Greek: aéros- "air" and -planos "wandering") and often shortened to plane, is a heavier-than-air craft in which movement of the wings is not used to generate lift
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