how does a wing work?

505 views

So full disclosure I personally understand Bernoulli’s principle and understand how a wing works due to it.

Here’ is what I need. My 5 year old son loves planes, and loves watching birds fly. As such he is asking questions of how a bird’s wing works vs how an airplane’s wing works. I can’t seem to simplify down Bernoulli’s to the extent that he can understand how a wing works. So I’m coming to you all for advice.

In: 19

15 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

A wing works because of the stickiness of air. Air flows over the surface of the wing and is whipped downward slightly. Newtons first law, if air mass is being whipped down a little, the wing doing the whipping is forced up. A frictionless wing could not make lift. The bottom of the wing is not important for lift. If there is a loss in that stickiness, the wing stalls. If the bottom of the wing did anything, turning up couldnt stall a wing. But because the top is what makes the lift, turning up too much creates a seperation of the laminar flow layers of the air over the wing, vortices are created and wind no longer flies downward, lift is lost.

Sailing is a great way to visualize how a wing works.

You are viewing 1 out of 15 answers, click here to view all answers.