Moderator: The Mod Squad
fivebob wrote:Imagine a plane is sat on the beginning of a massive conveyor belt/travelator type arrangement, as wide and as long as a runway, and intends to take off. The conveyer belt is designed to exactly match the speed of the wheels at any given time, moving in the opposite direction of rotation.
There is no wind.
Can the plane take off?
Explain why it can, or cannot, take off?
fivebob wrote:Imagine a plane is sat on the beginning of a massive conveyor belt/travelator type arrangement, as wide and as long as a runway, and intends to take off. The conveyer belt is designed to exactly match the speed of the wheels at any given time, moving in the opposite direction of rotation.
There is no wind.
Can the plane take off?
Explain why it can, or cannot, take off?
V8MOFO wrote:
Many people think that a plane takes off by air particles pushing up on the wings but it is actually due to 'how' the air passes by the wing.
You may or may not know that a plane's wing is flat on the bottom and curved on the top. This means that air particles that are forced to go above the planes wing has a longer distance to travel past the wing. The faster the air particles move the less pressure there is. Thus, the wing moves into the low air pressure ( which is up ) bring the plane with it.
If there is no partical movement ( like a vacuum, where there is none ) a plane will not lift.
RomanV wrote:Lets say that the speed of the plane, relative to the earth, is 100kph.
This means that the speed of the travelator relative to the plane will be 100kph also. (in the opposite direction of course)
The plane will be traveling at 100kph relative to the earth, and 200kph relative to the travelator.
RomanV wrote:The plane will be traveling at 100kph relative to the earth, and 200kph relative to the travelator.
V8MOFO wrote:This about it this way, if you jacked the plane up so the wheels are off the ground, started the engines and got the wheels going to 100kmph ( for arguments sake ). And just kept turning them faster and faster, until top speed. Would the plane take off? No, because the engines alone arn't powerful enough to levitate the plane from a stop start ( relative to the drag force ).
ollieboy wrote:According to the New Zealand institute of Physics Test Paper. The Plane would not take off because of the fact there is no air movement over the wings.
It is true that planes take off on skis etc but they are still moving when they take off, they are being thrust by props or jets which push the plane along and cause air movement under the wings which creates lift.
If the plane on the conveyor belt was moving at huge speeds it still remains in the same position in terms of displacement relative to the earth beneath the conveyor belt. This means there is no air movement across the wings to create lift.
ollieboy wrote:According to the New Zealand institute of Physics Test Paper. The Plane would not take off because of the fact there is no air movement over the wings.
It is true that planes take off on skis etc but they are still moving when they take off, they are being thrust by props or jets which push the plane along and cause air movement under the wings which creates lift.
If the plane on the conveyor belt was moving at huge speeds it still remains in the same position in terms of displacement relative to the earth beneath the conveyor belt. This means there is no air movement across the wings to create lift.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests