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increases with speed

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6y ago
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7y ago

It keeps the air in the air.

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Q: The lifting force on an airplane's wing does which of the following?
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Related questions

What happenes when you increase an airplanes wing size and speed?

generates more lifting force


increasing an airplane's speed or wing size does which of the following?

Generates more lifting force


The lifting force on an airplane's wing does what?

increases with speed


Is the upward force on a airplane wing is thrust?

Thrust is the forward motion of the airplane provided by the engines. Lift is the upward force on an airplanes wing.


What does the lifting force on an airplane wing do?

increases with speed


What is a Fixed Wing Airplane?

A fixed-wing aircraft is an aircraft which has wings that are attached to the aircraft and do not move. The term is used to differentiate airplanes from other types of flying vehicles such as lifting-body aircraft (balloons and blimps) or rotary aircraft such as helicopters and auto gyros. All airplanes are considered fixed-wing aircraft and even swing-wing or otherwise moving-wing airplanes are usually referred to as being in the fixed-wing category of aircraft.


Bernoulli's equation and an airplane's wing?

Bernoulli's equations explain 100% of the lifting force created by wings. But Newton's third law also explains 100% of the lifting force. This should not be suprising, since Bernoulli's equations are based on Newton's laws. Bernoulli and Newton are two different ways of explaining a complicated situation. Neither is more "right" than the other. If we choose one explanation while ignoring the other, then our understanding of flight will be incomplete. To be clearer... Bernoulli's equation describes the lifting force in terms of pressures applied to the wing surface. There are no other forces involved. If we know the pattern of pressures, then we know the lifting force. Yet the explanation of flight remains incomplete. Wings feel pressure because they change the motion of the surrounding "parcels" of air, and air has mass. If a wing applies a force which causes air to accelerate downwards, then by Newton's 2nd and 3rd laws, the wing must experience an equal upwards lifting force. If we know the acceleration of the air surrounding the wing, then we know the lifting force.


Do airplanes experience lift when the air is curved up and over the wings?

No, the lift is generated by the airfoil (shape of the wing), which when the wind hits the wing it is forced downwards. The wind pushed downwards is creating an upwards reaction force on the wing of the plane in accordance with Newton's 3rd law. Also there are adjustable flaps at the back of the wings allowing the pilot to adjust the amount of lift to increase/decrease altitude.for more detail see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_(force)


What does airplane swing contribute to the lifting force force on an airplane?

When the wing is straight it creates more 'lift' . When swept it allows more speed.


Why doesn't an airplane fall?

Airplanes do not "fall" because the lift from the wings is enough to counteract the force of gravity. Because of the shape of the wing, there is lower pressure above the wing and higher pressure below.


Which of the following best explains how airplanes stay afloat?

An areoplane stays up by creating a higher pressure underneath the wing than there is above the wing when air is forced over it.


What was World War I airplanes?

There were many different airplanes developed during the war - bombers and fighters. They came in single wing (monoplanes), two wing (biplanes) and three wing (triplane) varieties.