aircraft

technology

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Assorted References

  • major reference
    • Air New Zealand Limited
      In airplane

      …of a class of fixed-wing aircraft that is heavier than air, propelled by a screw propeller or a high-velocity jet, and supported by the dynamic reaction of the air against its wings. For an account of the development of the airplane and the advent of civil aviation see history of…

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  • aerodynamic principles
    • differential manometer, Torricellian barometer, and siphon
      In fluid mechanics: Drag

      …is the wing of an aircraft with a slot through its leading edge; the current of air channeled through this slot imparts forward momentum to the fluid in the boundary layer on the upper surface of the wing to hinder this fluid from moving backward. The cowls that are often…

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  • contribution by Tsiolkovsky
  • liability insurance coverage
    • flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina
      In insurance: Aviation insurance

      …covers physical damage to the aircraft and legal liability arising out of its ownership and operation. Specific policies are also available to cover the legal liability of airport owners arising out of the operation of hangars or from the sale of various aviation products. These latter policies are similar to…

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  • regulation by air law
    • In air law: Airports

      …an airport requires special permission, aircraft leaving or entering a country will normally be required to do so at an airport having customs and immigration facilities. Airports that are open to public use are generally subject to some form of licensing or control in order to ensure compliance with minimum…

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  • significance of Boeing Company
    • Boeing 707
      In Boeing Company

      …a leading producer of military aircraft, helicopters, space vehicles, and missiles, a standing significantly enhanced with the company’s acquisition of the aerospace and defense units of Rockwell International Corporation in 1996 and its merger with McDonnell Douglas Corporation in 1997. Formerly Boeing Airplane Company, the firm assumed its current name…

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aerospace industry

  • first flight by Orville Wright, December 17, 1903
    In aerospace industry: Civil aircraft

    Builders of civil aircraft comprise two categories: producers of general aviation aircraft and producers of heavy aircraft. General aviation is defined as all aircraft activities not related to military, major airline, or air-cargo flying. It includes light planes and helicopters used for private pleasure…

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  • sonic boom
    • In sonic boom

      When an aircraft travels at subsonic speed, the pressure disturbances, or sounds, that it generates extend in all directions. Because this disturbance is transmitted earthward continuously to every point along the path, there are no sharp disturbances or changes of pressure. At supersonic speeds, however, the pressure…

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effect of

    • clear-air turbulence
      • In clear-air turbulence

        …and constitute a hazard to aircraft. This turbulence can be caused by small-scale (i.e., hundreds of metres and less) wind velocity gradients around the jet stream, where rapidly moving air is close to much slower air. It is most severe over mountainous areas and also occurs in the vicinity of…

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    • microbursts
      • thunderstorm microburst
        In microburst

        …create a particular hazard for airplanes at takeoff and landing because the pilot is confronted with a rapid and unexpected shift from headwind to tailwind.

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    use in

      • air warfare
        • In air warfare

          …may be conducted against other aircraft, against targets on the ground, and against targets on the water or beneath it. Air warfare is almost entirely a creation of the 20th century, in which it became a primary branch of military operations.

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      • business
        • Air New Zealand Limited
          In airplane: Civil aircraft

          Business aircraft are used to generate revenues for their owners and include everything from small single-engine aircraft used for pilot training or to transport small packages over short distances to four-engine executive jets that can span continents and oceans. Business planes are used by salespeople,…

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      • fighting wildland fire
        • wildfire: Stanislaus National Forest
          In wildfire

          Aircraft were first used in fighting wildland fires in California in 1919. Airplanes and helicopters are primarily used for dumping water, for observation, and occasionally for assisting in communication and transporting personnel, supplies, and equipment.

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      • intelligence-gathering
        • U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency
          In military intelligence: Imagery

          collected by satellites and high-altitude aircraft is one of the most important sources of intelligence. It not only provides information for a huge number of intelligence categories (such as order of battle, military operations, scientific and technical developments, and economics), but it is indispensable for successfully monitoring compliance with arms-limitation…

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      • policing
        • French National Police: patrolling
          In police: Mobility

          Various types of aircraft are used in police patrols as well. Helicopters, the most common type, are often equipped with a high-intensity spotlight that can provide overhead illumination for units on the ground. Another device used by aircraft, a passive infrared unit sometimes called forward-looking infrared (FLIR), provides…

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      • September 11 attacks
        • September 11 attacks
          In September 11 attacks

          airline hijackings and suicide attacks committed in 2001 by 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda against targets in the United States, the deadliest terrorist attacks on American soil in U.S. history. The attacks against New York City and

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      • tracking of tropical cyclones
        • tropical cyclone
          In tropical cyclone: Use of satellites and aircraft

          …must be obtained directly, using aircraft. This information is essential in providing the most accurate warnings possible. Operational reconnaissance is done only by the United States for storms that may affect its continental landmass. No other country does this type of reconnaissance. Tropical cyclones in other ocean basins occur over…

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      • weather forecasting
      • World War I
        • World War I
          In World War I: Air warfare

          …and sea forces used the aircraft put at their disposal primarily for reconnaissance, and air fighting began as the exchange of shots from small arms between enemy airmen meeting one another in the course of reconnoitering. Fighter aircraft armed with machine guns, however, made their appearance in 1915. Tactical bombing…

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      use of

        • air−traffic control
          • officer using charts for navigation
            In navigation

            …with the responsibility for assigning aircraft to selected paths that minimize the likelihood of collision. Civil air navigation is profoundly influenced by the requirements of following the instructions of these controllers.

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          • Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport
            In traffic control: History

            …120-foot flight in a heavier-than-air craft at Kitty Hawk, N.C., U.S. It is difficult to imagine the rapid technological advances that now allow interplanetary travel by unmanned, but directly controlled, satellites and probes. The earliest common uses of aviation were by the military and the civilian postal service. With…

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        • airports
          • O'Hare International Airport
            In airport

            …the takeoff and landing of aircraft. An airport usually has paved runways and maintenance facilities and serves as a terminal for passengers and cargo.

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        • flight recorder
          • flight recorders
            In flight recorder

            …performance and condition of an aircraft in flight. Governmental regulatory agencies require these devices on commercial aircraft to make possible the analysis of crashes or other unusual occurrences. Flight recorders actually consist of two functional devices, the flight data recorder (FDR) and the cockpit voice recorder (CVR), though sometimes these…

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        • gas turbines
          • Title
            In gas-turbine engine: Intercooling, reheating, and regeneration

            In aircraft gas-turbine engines attention must be paid to weight and diameter size. This does not permit the addition of more equipment to improve performance. Accordingly, commercial aircraft engines operate on the simple Brayton cycle idealized above. These limitations do not apply to stationary gas turbines…

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        • gasoline engines
          • V-type engine
            In gasoline engine

            …trucks and buses, general aviation aircraft, outboard and small inboard marine units, moderate-sized stationary pumping, lighting plants, machine tools, and power tools. Four-stroke gasoline engines power the vast majority of automobiles, light trucks, medium-to-large motorcycles, and lawn mowers. Two-stroke gasoline engines are less common, but they are used for small…

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        • laminated glass windshields
          • Figure 2: The irregular arrangement of ions in a sodium silicate glass.
            In industrial glass: Lamination

            For aircraft, windshields may have several laminates, sometimes as many as three glass plies and two plastic interlayers. At least one of the inner glass plies is strengthened by ion exchange (see above) in order to withstand the impact of flying objects such as birds. Bulletproof…

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        • magnesium
        • modern materials
          • electron hole: movement
            In materials science: Materials for aerospace

            …the selection of materials for aerospace structures is the enhancement of fuel efficiency to increase the distance traveled and the payload delivered. This goal can be attained by developments on two fronts: increased engine efficiency through higher operating temperatures and reduced structural weight. In order to meet these needs, materials…

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        • navigational instruments
          • officer using charts for navigation
            In navigation: The Pitot tube

            …a log for ships or aircraft. A typical Pitot marine log consists of a pair of thin-walled tubes projecting through the bottom of the ship and bent so as to face the direction of motion. One tube is open at the forward end; the opening is referred to as the…

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        • rocket engines
        • titanium
          • titanium metal
            In titanium processing: History

            …higher strength-to-weight ratios in jet aircraft structures and engines could not be satisfied efficiently by either steel or aluminum. As a result, the Department of Defense provided production incentives to start the titanium industry in 1950. Similar industrial capacity was founded in Japan, the U.S.S.R., and the United Kingdom. After…

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