Flight
Research: Airplanes are an efficient way of traveling to far places.
Airplanes are amazing if you know what and how the air keeps the plane airborne.
There are three components of flight: aerodynamics, the Bernoulli principal and
supersonic flight. Some other things about flight are the four forces, lift,
drag, weight, and thrust. One of the basic things you need to know about
airplanes is that the places where the plane can balance on one point called the
center of gravity. The tail on the plane is needed to balance the pitching
movement. First of all, aerodynamics plays a major role on many things,
especially in airplanes. Aerodynamics is the reaction of the air on the
specially shaped wing that lifts an airplane off the ground. Also, aerodynamics
is the study of gases in motion. The term aerodynamics comes from the Greeks
meaning air power. Isaac Newton bases aerodynamics on the physics theorem.
People who experiment with aerodynamics are called aerodynamicist. Their basic
tool is the wind tunnel. A professor of engineering, Osborne Reynolds, conducted
many experiments with paper airplanes and regular airplanes and found out
Viscosity (thickness) affects the way fluids behave. All fluids have some
viscosity. As a fluid flows over a surface, the fluid molecules closest to the
surface cling microscopic roughness of the surface. As you move away from the
surface, there is a small transition distance where the fluid’s viscosity limits
the change in speed of the adjacent molecules, until at a certain distances the
fluid is at full speed. (Paper airplane aerodynamics www.geocities.com/capecanaveral/1817/paene/html)
Osborne invented a number that was devised which gives the importance of
viscosity in fluid flow. It’s called the Reynold’s number. Reynold’s number
=9340 for air so you’d take 9340x velocity relative to surface (mph) x length
over surface fluid has traveled feet. This determines how influential the
viscosity is. Secondly, Swiss mathematician and physicist, Daniel Bernoulli,
created Bernoulli’s principle in 1738. It stated the concept that as the speed
of a moving fluid increases, the pressure within the fluid decreases. An
increase in the fluid’s speed must be matched by a decrease in pressure. The
mathematical theorem for the Bernoulli affect is p + ? p V2. One source said,
“the principle also applies to the spinning of a baseball” (Simons, 1989, pg.
23)
The rotation causes an additional velocity component to be sent in the
direction of rotation. Because of all that, the total velocity around the ball
is higher on one side then the other. This is an example of how Bernoulli’s
principle works. Next, supersonic flight includes speeds from mach one to five:
above five are considered hypersonic. The bell X-1 rocket plane first achieved
supersonic flight in 1947. “Many attempts had been made before that but when the
plane ran against the sound barrier the pilot often lost control when the shock
waves built up against the surface” (Compton’s 1994). Mach one is considered
traveling below the speed of sound (subsonic). Mach two is traveling twice the
speed of sound (supersonic). All aircraft’s that are traveling at supersonic or
hypersonic speed create a shock wave that represents a big change in the air
pressure. The shock is in reality a cone shape (a mach cone). The mach cone at
mach 1 is more of a hill but as the mach numbers increase, the cone gets pushed
back to more of a mountain. As the wave gets closer to the wing, the drag
increases dramatically. When you are at subsonic mach numbers, the drag is
increased as a result of small wing span or low aspect ratio. “Low aspect ratio
is the ratio of span to mean chord of an airfoil” (Reithmaier, 1995). A typical
supersonic airplane gives off two main shock waves: bow shock and tail shock.
Next, there are four forces of flight; lift, weight, drag, and thrust. Drag is
the air resistance to forward motion. Thrust is produced by the power plant that
contracts drag. The formula for drag is D=1/2 x p x V2 x S x CD. The S in this
formula is the area of the wing area of the whole aircraft. If the plane is
level, lift will equal weight. In conclusion, airplanes have a lot of scientific
information behind the way that the plane stays in the air. The airplanes have
to be aerodynamically shaped to reach supersonic flight. The Bernoulli affect
also helps keep the plane in the air by measuring the viscosity and comparing it
to the air pressure. Supersonic flight is from mach 1 to mach 5 and above that
is hypersonic. This relates to my experiment in many ways. The paper airplane
has to be aerodynamically shaped so it can fly well. The paper airplane also has
a Reynolds number, which was created by Daniel Bernoulli. The equation for paper
airplane is 9340*10*.4 =37,000. Of course the project airplane will not be
traveling at supersonic speeds but it would have the same concept of cutting
through the air.
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