Airplanes stay up in the sky because they push air down, and that pushes them up, like when you jump on a trampoline!
When an airplane moves forward, its wings slice through the air, kind of like how your hand slices through water when you swim. But instead of just moving through air, the shape of the wing helps push air downward.
Think about it like this: if you hold a spoon under running water and angle it, the water gets deflected down, and the spoon goes up! That’s what happens with airplane wings. The air is pushed down, and that pushes the plane up, making it fly.
How Wings Make Air Move
The top of the wing is curved more than the bottom. As the airplane moves forward, the air flows faster over the top of the wing, which makes the pressure lower there, like when you blow on a piece of paper and it goes up. The higher pressure underneath pushes the wing (and the whole plane) upward.
So even though airplanes are heavy, like a big truck, they can still fly because they’re pushing air down, and that helps them stay up in the sky!
Examples
- An adult uses a fan to demonstrate how air movement can push upward.
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See also
- How does an airplane manage to fly and stay airborne?
- How does an airplane fly even though it is much heavier than air?
- What is plane?
- How does an airplane fly without falling?
- How do airplanes actually fly? - Raymond Adkins?