Sunday, January 8, 2012

whup

sorry. the post before shows  only a few words.

aerodynamics


NASA Logo - Web Link to NASA.govVertical Line+ Text Only Site
+ Non-Flash Version
+ Contact Glenn
Go
ABOUT NASANEWS AND EVENTSMULTIMEDIAMISSIONSMyNASAWORK FOR NASA

Welcome to the Beginner's Guide to Aerodynamics
 
Image of jet airplane
What is aerodynamics? The word comes from two Greek words: aerios, concerning the air, anddynamis, which means force. Aerodynamics is the study of forces and the resulting motion of objects through the air. Judging from the story of Daedalus and Icarus, humans have been interested in aerodynamics and flying for thousands of years, although flying in a heavier-than-air machine has been possible only in the last hundred years. Aerodynamics affects the motion of a large airliner,model rocket, a beach ball thrown near the shore, or a kite flying high overhead. The curveball thrown by big league baseball pitchers gets its curve from aerodynamics.

At this Web site you can study aerodynamics at your own pace and to your own level of interest. Some of the topics included are: Newton's basic equations of motion; the motion of a free falling object, that neglects the effects of aerodynamics; the terminal velocity of a falling object subject to both weight and air resistance; the three forces (lift, drag, and weight) that act on a glider; and finally, the four forces that act on a powered airplane. Because aerodynamics involves both the motion of the object and the reaction of the air, there are several pages devoted to basic gas properties and how those properties change through the atmosphere.