Egon
Epic Contributor
Code:
Egon, I don't have a clue of what you're talking about
Hey Me's Bye, that makes two of us!!
Remember the Avro Arrow
http://http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/equip/historical/arrowlst_e.asp
Egon, I don't have a clue of what you're talking about
BillyP said:The original details were
"a plane is standing on a movable runway( something like a conveyor).as the plane moves (relative to what, the conveyor or the ground?) the conveyor moves (relative to the ground? Presumably so, but not stated.) but in the opposite direction.the conveyor has a system that tracks the speed of the plane (relative to the ground? or relative to the conveyor?) and matches it exactly in the opposite direction (relative to the ground? or relative to the plane?)"
The only fixed point I see in this scenario is the ground on both sides of the conveyor? (That is all that I can see, also. But nowhere does the original problem state that the speeds are measured relative to that fixed point.) Are/can you read something else into it?
Egon said:Hey Me's Bye, that makes two of us!!Code:Egon, I don't have a clue of what you're talking about![]()
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Remember the Avro Arrow![]()
http://http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/equip/historical/arrowlst_e.asp
Tom_Veatch said:So, is the plane's movement measured relative to a tree growing beside the conveyor, or is it relative to the surface of the conveyor belt?
Tom_Veatch said:So, is the plane's movement measured relative to a tree growing beside the conveyor, or is it relative to the surface of the conveyor belt? If it's relative to the tree, then the plane moves forward relative to the air and will fly. If it's movement is measured relative to a point on the conveyor, then the plane stands still relative to the tree and the plane doesn't fly.
Of course, in the latter case, the pilot has to be very precise with power settings so that only enough thrust is generated to overcome the rotary inertia of the wheels and the friction in the wheel bearings. In other words, to apply only that power needed to taxi forward at a speed relative to the conveyer that's equal to the speed of the conveyor relative to the tree.
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Oh, Ray, there you go getting practical!RayH said:The problem with the scenario of the plane moving forward relative to the conveyor but not the surrounding ground is that its impossible to initiate.
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greenedeere said:Since you settled that!!!Real good. What about the landing? If the pilot tries to land on the conveyor will it move as soon as and be at the same speed as the plane on touch down.HEEHEE.
Tom_Veatch said:Oh, Ray, there you go getting practical!I agree, as a practical matter, it would be extremely difficult to initiate and maintain that scenario. However, a mathmatical argument might be made supporting a "conveyor-centric" view of the situation. But I'm not going to do it.
First, I'm sure it would be deadly boring to anyone not fascinated with things mathmatical, and second, I'm not sure my proficiency in calculus has survived the years since I last exercised it. But, for the mathmatically inclined, if you allow stepwise changes in the state vector while the system remains in equilibrium and then take the limit as the step size approaches zero, you may find the velocity of the plane relative to the conveyor can increase while it's velocity relative to the ground remains zero. Or you may find a singularity that renders the scenario impossible.
In either case, the proof is left as an exercise for the student. I'm quite content with a "ground-centric" view of the system in which the airplane accelerates to liftoff speed, the tires self-destruct, the wheel bearings melt, and the plane flies merrily away into the sunset as the pilot wonders whether or not to use synthetic oil at the next oil-change.
RayH said:The prop is also an airfoil. When its spinning, it is creating lift, not vertical lift but horizontal lift. If you have horizontal lift that overcomes the small bit of drag of the wheels spinning, the plane will move forward, thus creating vertical lift and off into the wild blue.
TheKid said:I’m no physicist, but I do know the plane can either move, or not move, but it can't do both of them at the same time.![]()
JimParker said:And that's the problem with everyone's logic - and I mean both sides!
If the conveyor is capable of infinite speed, it can also produce infinite DRAG at the wheels. Since acceleration occurs only if Thrust is greater than Drag, then it follows that the plane will NOT fly IF the conveyor is capable of creating enough drag (by turning the wheels at well-above-takeoff speed - maybe 10X to 20X that speed?). All you pilots, engineers, and mathematicians out there should remember that formula - it's part of basic ground school If Thrust = Drag, acceleration is ZERO.
On the other hand, if the conveyor is NOT able to turn that fast, and cannot change it's speed instantaneously to counteract the thrust provided by the propeller, the plane will eventually fly, becuse thrust will exceed drag for at least brief moments. When Thrust is greater than Drag, acceleration occurs.
Real world? The plane can (and will) take off, because the "perfect" conveyor doesn't exist.
Theoretical world described in the problem as stated? The plane will not move (it's so stated in the problem definition), and therefore won't take off.
silverdollar6 said:I`ll be glad when this plane runs out of fuel.
Farmwithjunk said:It ran out of fuel some time ago. If this plane leaves the ground now it's only because of all the HOT AIR.![]()
JimParker said:And that's the problem with everyone's logic - and I mean both sides!
If the conveyor is capable of infinite speed, it can also produce infinite DRAG at the wheels. Since acceleration occurs only if Thrust is greater than Drag, then it follows that the plane will NOT fly IF the conveyor is capable of creating enough drag (by turning the wheels at well-above-takeoff speed - maybe 10X to 20X that speed?). All you pilots, engineers, and mathematicians out there should remember that formula - it's part of basic ground school If Thrust = Drag, acceleration is ZERO.
On the other hand, if the conveyor is NOT able to turn that fast, and cannot change it's speed instantaneously to counteract the thrust provided by the propeller, the plane will eventually fly, becuse thrust will exceed drag for at least brief moments. When Thrust is greater than Drag, acceleration occurs.
Real world? The plane can (and will) take off, because the "perfect" conveyor doesn't exist.
Theoretical world described in the problem as stated? The plane will not move (it's so stated in the problem definition), and therefore won't take off.
schmism said:did i not say this was fun?!?!![]()