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Unpowered Flight

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
17 views5 pages

Unpowered Flight

Uploaded by

sarasori198555
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
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Unpowered flight

Unpowered flight is the ability to stay airborne for a period of time without using any power source.
There are several types of unpowered flight. Some have been exploited by nature, others by humankind,
and some by both.

Unpowered aircraft are aerial vehicles that can fly without any propulsion mechanism.

The ability to fly short or long distances without power has evolved many times in nature. Many creatures
capable of sustained wing-powered flight also soar unpowered for much of the time they are airborne.

Flight without power

Classification of flight methods


Pennycuick[1] divides animal flight into three types: parachuting, gliding and powered. He observes
however that these have no sharp boundaries. For example, at one point he sees parachutes as unpowered
and as a primitive form of soaring, while soaring itself he sees as being powered by air movement (wind).
Other methods, such as lighter-than-air flight, are used only by man.

This article makes the following distinctions between types or methods of unpowered flight, based on
their characteristics:

Lighter than air - Sustained flight, buoyed by a density less than air with no forward motion
required,
Drifting - Sustained free flight due to slow rate of descent compared to speed of updraft,
Parachuting - Vertical descent slowed by high air resistance, though possibly with a minor
horizontal motion (or sometimes defined as flight at a glide angle greater than 45 deg.),
Gliding - Forward flight with smooth airflow (or sometimes defined as flight with a glide angle
less than 45 deg),
Soaring - Sustained free gliding flight, drawing energy from rising air,
Kiting - Tethered flight using an angled plane to create an upward force from the wind.
These are summarised in the table:
Flight characteristics and methods
Flight mode

Sustained free
Short duration Tethered
flight

Not classified as Lighter than air


None Lighter than air
flight Drifting
Slower than
Forward Not classified as
downward Parachuting Parachuting
motion flight
motion
through the air
Faster than
downward Gliding Soaring Kiting
motion

Flight methods and usage


Some examples of usage are shown in the following table:

Flight methods vs. usage

Aircraft Animals Plants and fungi


Lighter than air Balloon — —

Drifting — Small insects Spores, Orchid seeds

Rotary wings (maple, sycamore)


Parachuting Parachute Spider kite
Hairs (dandelion)
Gliding Glider Flying squirrel Winged seeds (Alsomitra macrocarpa)

Soaring Sailplane Albatross

Kite
Kiting
Rotor kite

Lighter than air


Lighter than air flight is only used by man. An unpowered, lighter than air craft is called a balloon.

Balloons
A balloon is a bag filled with a gas with a lower density than the surrounding air to provide buoyancy.
The gas may be hot air, hydrogen, helium or, in the past, coal gas. The use of buoyant gases is unknown
in the natural world.

A balloon may be tethered like a kite or drift with the wind in free flight. The pilot can control the altitude
of a free-flying balloon, either by heating the gas or by releasing ballast weight. The wind direction often
changes with altitude, so this can give some degree of directional control.
Drifting
A free-falling object without any adaptation to flight can only be sustained by the wind if it is very light
and falls more slowly than the wind blows it upwards. A sufficiently light object can make use of updrafts
and drift on the wind in this way for long periods of time.

Many mould and bacterial spores, even live bacteria, are small enough to drift for long distances and to
great heights on the wind.

Some plants also use the wind for seed dispersal in this way. Orchid seeds are very small and dust-like.

Parachuting
Parachuting is essentially falling or drifting but with an
aerodynamic braking surface. The high ratio of surface area
to weight reduces the rate of descent of the parachute,
allowing it to stay airborne for longer periods. The
aerodynamic surface may also allow a small amount of
forward motion, but a parachute always falls faster than it can
travel forwards. The airflow around a parachute is typically
turbulent.

Small creatures and seeds that have evolved parachutes can


be blown on the wind for long distances. Among the plants,
Dandelion, milkweed and poplar) seeds have hairs that act as
parachutes. Some spiders cast parachutes of thread. Although
mostly done by small spiderlings, adults weighing over
100 mg and with a body size of up to 14 mm have been
observed casting parachutes a meter across into a strong
updraft.

Parachuting is also used by larger creatures and seeds to


travel shorter distances. Maple, pine and sycamore seeds have A British paratrooper comes in to land
one or two wings that act like parachutes to aid in seed
dispersal. Flying frogs use their webbed feet as parachutes.

Gliding
Gliding flight requires an initial launch giving the object enough energy to fly.

Aerodynamic lift
The principles of aerodynamic lift are shared by both nature and man-made aircraft. As the aeronaut falls,
outspread wings are angled to the oncoming air to create a fast forward flow of air over the wing. This
flow generates aerodynamic lift which slows the rate of descent. The result is gliding flight as opposed to
a simple descent like a parachute.

If the air is rising faster than the object is descending, it will


be carried upwards. In this way a gliding object can gain
additional potential energy from sources such as thermals and
ridge lift.

Glider aircraft
Glider aircraft include sailplanes, hang gliders and Hang glider just after launch from Salève,
France
paragliders. They must gain their initial energy of motion
from a launch process. The launch may be by pulling the
aircraft into the air with a tow-line, with a ground-based winch or vehicle, or with a powered "tug"
aircraft. For foot-launched aircraft, there is also the option of merely stepping off a high location. Once
the glider is released, it flies freely.

Gliding animals
Creatures able to launch themselves into the air and glide short distances include:

Flying squirrels
Petaurus marsupials
Flying snakes
Flying dragon lizards
Flying fish

Soaring
Unpowered flights of longer duration and distance are possible if rising air is used to gain energy. This
can further reduce the rate of descent or even increase height, which is known as soaring.

Soaring is where the object/animal obtains additional energy from rising air without exerting any power
to remain airborne. An example is the albatross, which is a large seabird renowned for its ability to stay
aloft by soaring above the waves for days at a time. Many other birds such as raptors and storks also
deliberately soar to extend their time aloft. Insects are often caught by rising air and so can be dispersed
by it.

Many types of glider aircraft are designed to exploit rising air and can therefore also soar.

Kiting
An airflow over a tethered object can gain it height up to a maximum determined partly by the length of
the tether, and then enable it to maintain height while there is sufficient airflow. Such a tethered flying
object is called a kite.
If there is a wind, the tether may be attached to a fixed point. The motion of an object such as a speedboat
can also be used to create an airflow or to augment the wind. The mobile object can even be another
kite.[2]

Manned kites have been flown for a variety of purposes.

See also
Kite types
Gliding
Flying and gliding animals

References
1. Pennycuick (1972)
2. System and method for wind-powered flight Dale C. Kramer ([Link]
ent/US20010025900)

Bibliography
Pennycuick, C.J.; Animal flight, Arnold (1972).

External links
Media related to Unpowered flight at Wikimedia Commons

Retrieved from "[Link]

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