“Design” by Robert Frost and “Wing-Spread” by Abbie Huston Site 1: "Abbie Huston Evans." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation‚ 16 Feb. 2013. Web. 02 Mar. 2013. Reasoning: This site helps define Abbie Hustons writing style and goes into detail about her previous work after writing “Wing-Spread”. It also gives examples and several links mentioning Abbie Huston‚ or her work. Site 2: "Analysis of "Design" Written by Robert Frost." Yahoo! Contributor Network. N.p.‚ n.d. Web. 02 Mar. 2013. Reasoning:
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understand how does an airplane fly. This article is then fitted with illustrations to help you more understand about the said topic. Also‚ here you can greatly understand the theory behind the said topic. | A ll the object here on the Earth above‚ needs a wing in order to lift itself and a power to push itself forward. If an object is light in weight it is easy to fly‚ like a kite‚ it is made up of paper and thin strips of wood‚ so it is light in weight‚ a bird; their body is lightweight so they can fly
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dates to the first time prehistoric man observed birds. The discovery of the kite that could fly in the air by the Chinese made human think about flying. For many centuries‚ humans tried to fly just like birds and have studied the flight of birds. Wings made of feathers or light weight wood was attached to arms to test their ability to fly. The results were often disastrous as the muscles of the human arms are not like a bird and cannot move with the strength of a bird. The invention of the airplane
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is causing drag on your body. The planes shape‚ size‚ and speed also affect the amount of drag on an aircraft. These are the factors of aerodynamics. Wings aerodynamics is shown by it’s lift to drag ratio. The lift will make at a given speed an angle and can be one to two orders of magnitude greater than the total drag on the wing. High lift to drag ratio needs a smaller thrust to push the wings through the air at with a sufficient lift. The materials used to configure the paper planes is crucial
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order to fly‚ an object must have "lift." Lift is what pushes something up. Lift is made by wings. Wings have a curved shape on top and are flatter on the bottom. That shape makes air flow over the top faster than under the bottom. The faster air on top of the wing makes suction on the top of the wing and the wing moves up. Airplanes get lift from their wings. A helicopter’s rotor blades are spinning wings. A helicopter moves air over its rotor by spinning the blades. The rotor makes the lift that
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War I airplanes were slow and had poor maneuverability. The plane could not effectively carry weapons‚ so air travel was dangerous. The early planes had wood and fabric frames which made them very flammable. If a bomb‚ which was carried under the wings‚ was shot‚ the plane would blow up and both pilots would be dead. “It seems no one had interest in the bomb positions of these planes.” (Stirling‚ Para. 1) Though World War II planes also had the same potential to blow up if shot‚ they were much‚ much
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flying on a beautiful day is when it’s in an airplane built with your own hands. What’s truly remarkable about homemade aircraft are their great diversity of design. They can take the form of biplanes or ultra lights that aren’t much more than a hang glider with a motor and landing gear. Some are as large as commercially built planes while others look and sound like go-carts with wings. They are remarkable because anyone with some mechanical aptitude and a work ethic can build one. Your basic airplane
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Well‚ on the outside most small general aviation aircraft have a thin‚ cloth skin stretched over an aluminum skeleton for strength. The aircraft has four surfaces that control how the pilot can manipulate the plane in flight. On the outside trailing edge of the wings are the ailerons‚ they control how much the airplane rolls when the pilot turns the yoke (similar to a steering wheel in a vehicle) either right or left. On the inside of the wings‚ close to the body of the plane‚ are the flaps. They
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5- 6 | 2. | International Flights | 7 | 3. | Form of Air travel Vehicles | 7-9 | 4. | Breif History abput Air Planes | 10 | 5. | Current Air Travel | 11-13 | 6. | The 2 main Aircraft Producers To The World | 14 | 7. | The World Largest Passenger Aircraft | 15 | 8. | Advantages of Air Travel | 16-20 | 9. | Disadvantages of Air travel | 21-26 | 10. | Notable Incidents | 26 | 11. | Solutions | 27-30 | 12. | General Security Guidelines
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Spice Design Process Mahmoud Alama/Oct 2nd 2014 Bibliography http://www.10paperairplanes.com https://snapguide.com/guides/make-a-simple-paper-airplane-that-flies-great http://www.instructables.com/id/No‚-this-is-the-absolute-greatest-and-easiest-to-m/ http://www.bestpaperairplanes.com/deltry1.html http://www.amazingpaperairplanes.com/Simple.html 4 Principles of Flight Lift Lift is the force that directly opposes the weight of an airplane and holds the airplane in the
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