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which need a long path or way for a plan.
when it is going to fly up toward the sky?
or when it come down to the airport? why?

2006-08-26 03:05:20 · 2 answers · asked by obadah s 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

2 answers

going up requires long path and landing requires long plan coz you have to look out for other planes which are ready for take off

2006-08-26 03:11:48 · answer #1 · answered by ankit pruthi 2 · 0 0

Sir:
I assume that your typewritten word plan means plane, as in an airplane.

If that is correct, an airplane has some kind of engine with propulsion to drive it forward. The plane also has wings or some sort of lifting surfaces which when passed through the air generate lift.

When the wings or lifting surfaces are moving fast enough through the air, enough lift energy is created to directly offset the downward force of gravity on the plane, and it begins to rise into the air. As it moves faster through the air, even more lift is created allowing it to rise quickly and manuver with greater ease. Flaps on the airplane wings are used to adjust the lift of the wing as needed in flight.

The duration of a flight is determined by one of two factors: Flight Plan or Engine Fuel Supply exhausted. That is to say, a plane can stop flying because it has reached its destination, or because the engines stopped producing propulsion/thrust.

It is hoped that large airplanes do not just come down from the sky at random. Many safety features are built into aircraft in order to prevent unintended cessation of flight. It is expected that large aircraft will take off from and land at properly equipped airports. Small aircraft may utilize unimproved landing spots, however. And, let us not forget helicopter like aircraft which can ascend and descend vertically so that almost any spot is a possible landing site.

2006-08-29 08:10:55 · answer #2 · answered by zahbudar 6 · 0 0

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