The science behind how an aircraft glides

Wednesday, September 2, 2020 - 17:10 in Psychology & Sociology

Today, gliding is so commonplace, we don't think to ask when we see a plane or a helicopter doing it. (Carlo Giambarresi/)This story originally featured on Flying Magazine.I was quite young when I first fell in love with gliding. It may have been even before I fell in love with Cecilia Revilla, who sat in front of me in the fourth grade. When I say gliding, I don’t mean flying a sailplane; I was much too young for that. I mean just the fact of something gliding—a butterfly, a model airplane, a folded-up sheet of paper. That a balsa-and-tissue model my father had made would sail out, bobbing on the ripples of the air, circling, swooping or even merely tracing a long, straight, gently descending line from the brow of a hill as if it were rolling on invisible wheels down an invisible road – that was sweet, magical and,...

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