Mosquitoes can tolerate somewhat strong wind speeds. They are accustomed to flying and thriving on windy spring and summer days.
When it is windy, mosquitoes tend to stay in protected locations rather than fly around. They stay in vegetation or in the lee of buildings or other objects that protect them from the wind.
Wind speed, aerodynamics and the weight of the kite
They fly at night.
At 50 degrees F is when it is too cold for mosquitoes to fly.
The speed difference will be twice the wind difference. Example: Speed of plane (without wind) = 500 km/h, speed of wind = 100 km/h. In this case, the airplane's speed against the wind will be 500 - 100 = 400 km/h, and with prevailing wind, its speed will be 500 + 100 = 600 km/h. These numbers are just examples, actual numbers will vary, depending on the speed of the plane, and the speed of the wind.
It depends on your altitude and the speed at which you are flying at... and whether you have a head wind or tail wind but approximately 2.5 hours...
20km
I think it depends on the wind. If there is not a lot of wind the glider won't fly for that long but if there is a lot of wind the glider will fly for longer. I think it depends on the wind. If there is not a lot of wind the glider won't fly for that long but if there is a lot of wind the glider will fly for longer. I think it depends on the wind. If there is not a lot of wind the glider won't fly for that long but if there is a lot of wind the glider will fly for longer.
100 ft. It varies by mosquito species and by the conditions (wind, temperature). Probably 20-150 feet would cover most of the species
A bee can fly at up to about 15 miles per hour (24 kilometres per hour), so they tend not to leave the hive if the wind speed is close to or greater than this speed.
Fly with the Wind was created in 1976.