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Lesson: What Makes Airplanes Fly? Contributed by: Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder
Learning Objectives (Return to Contents)
After this lesson, students should be able to:
Introduction/Motivation (Return to Contents) Have you ever wondered what makes things move? What makes a huge, heavy airplane fly in the air? Why do swings work when you pump your legs? Why do parachutes slow things down when they're falling? Why do trees sway in the wind? Why does wind happen, even? The answer to all these questions is: forces. Engineers use physics to study forces, and then apply what they learn about forces to solve problems. Forces can make things speed up, and balanced forces can make things stay still or move at a constant speed. In this lesson, we will learn about forces by examining airplanes and parachutes. We will learn that more than one force acts on things that fly, and we will see what we can do to change forces. In other words, we'll learn why airplanes can fly! After a winter of experimenting with an air tunnel (an enclosed space with a stationery object surrounded by moving air) to learn more about the forces of flight, Wilbur and Orville Wright flew the first airplane that could be controlled in the air in 1903. Today, more than 4,000 public airports in the U.S. provide convenient travel and exploration around the world. People ride in hot-air balloons and jump out of airplanes with parachutes for fun, trusting that a balance of forces will keep them from hitting the ground too hard. An understanding of forces allows aeronautical engineers to design all the different kinds of airplanes, hot-air balloons, and parachutes that have ever flown! Lesson Background & Concepts for Teachers (Return to Contents) Aerodynamics, the study of flight, is founded on four basic forces — lift, weight, thrust and drag. The interaction of these forces explains the movement of objects as they soar through the sky. What seems like magic — a several ton object flying, like an airplane flying through the sky! — is actually based on the laws of physics and these four forces.
The first force, lift, pushes up on things that fly — airplanes, birds, helicopters and rockets. The shape of the wings on an airplane and the whirling blades of a helicopter create lift as they move through the air. The second force is weight — the force of two masses being attracted to each other. Weight is the force that pulls us towards the center of the earth, and why things fall down. The third force is thrust. Thrust is created by the jet engines or propellers of an airplane. Birds create thrust (and lift!) with their wings. Thrust pushes things that are flying. The fourth force is drag. Drag pushes against things moving through the air. It is caused by air particles bumping into the object. An object that is going faster bumps into more air particles, and so experiences more drag. Similarly, an object with a large surface area bumps into more particles, and experiences more drag. When the forces are not balanced, flying objects speed up, slow down or change direction. This is called acceleration. For example, when the thrust force is bigger than the drag force, an airplane speeds up. When the lift force is bigger than the weight force, the airplane goes up faster. When forces are balanced, objects do not accelerate. An airplane that is flying in a straight line at a certain speed has balanced forces. An airplane can even be going up or down and have balanced forces. As long as the airplane is not turning, speeding up or slowing down (in any direction, even up and down!) the forces are balanced. Sometimes, two of the forces may be the same thing. For example, a rocket engine pushes a rocket straight up, providing both lift and thrust. A parachute could be caught in an updraft, and then the drag force could also provide lift. Not all four forces need to be present, either — if there is no wind, a hot air balloon would not have any thrust acting upon it, only lift, drag and weight. This may seem confusing, but that's okay. The important thing to remember is that the interaction of forces (whatever they're called) is responsible for everything that speeds up, slows down, stays still or moves at a constant speed. Vocabulary/Definitions (Return to Contents)
Associated Activities (Return to Contents)
Lesson Closure (Return to Contents) Draw a diagram of an airplane on the board. Have the students identify where the four forces are located that make it possible for the airplane to fly. What force must be larger for the airplane to speed up? (Answer: Thrust) What force must be larger as the airplane takes off? (Answer: Lift) What force must be larger for the airplane to slow down? (Answer: Drag) What force must be larger for the airplane to begin descending? (Answer: Weight) Ask the students why it is important for engineers to understand these forces. How might engineers make airplanes better? (Example answer: Decrease drag by improving the shape of the plane.) Assessment (Return to Contents) Pre-Lesson Assessment Discussion Question: Solicit, integrate and summarize student responses.
Post-Introduction Assessment Voting: Ask a true/false question and have students vote by holding thumbs up for true and thumbs down for false. Count the votes and write the totals on the board. Give the right answer.
Lesson Summary Assessment Drawing: Have the students draw a picture of a scene, maybe the classroom, the playground or their house. Then, ask them to draw arrows for all the forces at work in their picture and try to name as many of those forces as they can. Bingo: Provide each student with a sheet of paper containing a list of the lesson vocabulary terms. Have each student walk around the room and find a student who can define one vocabulary term. Students must find a different student for each term. When a student has all terms completed s/he shouts "Bingo!" Continue until two or three students have bingo. Ask the students who shouted "Bingo!" to give definitions of the vocabulary terms. Lesson Extension Activities (Return to Contents) Ask the students to write a short story describing a situation that involves "balanced" forces (constant motion) versus "unbalanced" forces (when things accelerate). How are the forces acting on an airplane flying similar to the forces acting on a boat moving through water? (Answer: Lift = buoyancy, thrust = thrust, weight = weight, drag = drag.) How are they different? (Answer: Caused by different things: sails instead of propellers for thrust, water instead of air for drag, etc.) Have the students investigate the history of flight. What stories involve people wanting to fly (Greek myths)? Who were the first people to fly (successes and failures)? When did the first successful airborne experience occur? When was the first jet made? The first helicopter? The first rocket? When did humans first make a successful journey into space? Encourage the students to follow their own individual curiosity with respect to flight. Once the reports are written, have each student make a brief class presentation on what they learned. References (Return to Contents) Benson, Tom. Beginner's Guide to Aeronautics. June 4, 2002. Glenn Research Center, NASA. October 16, 2003. http://www.lerc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/index.html Hauser, Jill Frankel. Gizmos and Gadgets: Creating Science Contraptions that Work (and Knowing Why). Charlotte, Vermont: Williamson Publishing, 1999. Wolfson, Richard and Jay M. Pasachoff. Physics: For Scientists and Engineers. Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley Longman, Inc., 1999. Contributors Sabre Duren, Ben Heavner, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, Denise CarlsonCopyright © 2004 by Regents of the University of Colorado.The contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government. Supporting Program (Return to Contents) Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at BoulderLast Modified: September 26, 2008 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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