Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
The first airplane -- a kite on a stick -- built by Sir George Cayley in 1804.
Sir George Cayley, an English baronet, first conceived the idea of a fixed wing aircraft in
1799, then built the first successful glider in 1804. A conscientious scholar, he conducted the
first controlled experiments in aviation, proposed aeronautical theories, and raised the quest
for flight from a fool’s hope to a true science.
Sir George Cayley, England, builds a miniature glider with a single wing and a movable tail
mounted on a universal joint. It also has a movable weight to adjust the center of gravity. It is
the first recorded fixed-wing aircraft of any size capable of flight.
Important:
Control: Initially glider were controlled by moving the entire body or warping the wings.
i. ornithopters.
The dream of flying is as old as mankind itself. However, the concept of the airplane has only
been around for two centuries. Before that time, men and women tried to navigate the air by
imitating the birds. They built machines with flapping wings called ornithopters. On the
surface, it seemed like a good plan. After all, there are plenty of birds in the air to show that
the concept does work.
ii. Balloon
The first generally recognized human flight took place in Paris in 1783. Jean-François Pilâtre
de Rozier and François Laurent d' Arlandes went 8 km (5 miles) in a hot air balloon invented
by the Montgolfier brothers. In 1783,two French brothers named Joseph and Jacques
Montgolfier sent a rooster, a duck, and a sheep up in a hot-air balloon. The animals survived
the flight, and a few months later a French chemist and an army officer rose 90 m over Paris
in a Montgolfier balloon. They were the first people to fly freely above the Earth.
iii. Airplane
Sir George Cayley's 1799 design for an airplane -- fixed wings for lift, a movable tail for
control, and rows of "flappers" beneath the wings for thrust.
It wasn’t until the turn of the nineteenth century that an English baronet from the gloomy
moors of Yorkshire conceived a flying machine with fixed wings, a propulsion system, and
movable control surfaces. This was the fundamental concept of the airplane. Sir George
Cayley also built the first true airplane — a kite mounted on a stick with a movable tail. It was
crude, but it proved his idea worked, and from that first humble glider evolved the amazing
machines that have taken us to the edge of space at speeds faster than sound.
2. Modern Flight
Airships are large, steerable balloons with engines. The first airship was built in 1852 by
Frenchman Henri Giffard. By the 1920s, huge airships were carrying passengers across the
Atlantic Ocean. These airships were filled with hydrogen, a lighter-than-air gas. Unlike hot
air, hydrogen burns easily, so airships were always at risk of fire. Airships became less
popular after terrible accident on board the Hindenburg in 1937.
ii. Heavier-than-air
During the last years of the 18th century, Sir George Cayley started the first rigorous study of
the physics of flight. In 1799 he exhibited a plan for a glider, which except for planform was
completely modern in having a separate tail for control and having the pilot suspended below
the center of gravity to provide stability, and flew it as a model in 1804. Over the next five
decades Cayley worked on and off on the problem, during which he invented most of basic
aerodynamics and introduced such terms as lift and drag. He used both internal and external
combustion engines, fueled by gunpowder, but it was left to Alphonse Penaud to make
powering models simple, with rubber power. Later Cayley turned his research to building a
full-scale version of his design, first flying it unmanned in 1849, and in 1853 his coachman
made a short flight at Brompton, near Scarborough in Yorkshire.
In 1856, Frenchman Jean-Marie Le Bris made the first flight higher than his point of
departure, by having his glider "L'Albatros artificiel" pulled by a horse on a beach. He
reportedly achieved a height of 100 meters, over a distance of 200 meters.
In 1874, Félix du Temple built the "Monoplane", a large plane made of aluminium in Brest,
France, with a wingspan of 13 meters and a weight of only 80 kilograms (without the driver).
Several trials were made with the plane, and it is generally recognized that it achieved lift off
under its own power after a ski-jump run, glided for a short time and returned safely to the
ground, making it the first successful powered flight in history, although the flight was only a
short distance and a short time.
In France Clément Ader successfully launched his steam powered Eole for a short 50 meter
flight near Paris in 1890, making it the first self-propelled "long distance" flight in history. After
this test he immediately turned to a larger design, which took five years to build. However,
this design, the Avion III, was able to leave the ground but suffered lack of efficient controls.
The plane reportedly managed to lift off the ground a distance of 300 meters, at a small
height, and crashed out of control.
3. The "Pioneer Era" (1900 to 1914)
Santos-Dumont #6 rounding the Eiffel Tower in the process of winning the Deutsch Prize.
The first aircraft to make routine controlled flights were non-rigid airships (later called
"blimps".) The most successful early pioneering pilot of this type of aircraft was the Brazilian
Alberto Santos-Dumont who effectively combined a balloon with an internal combustion
engine. On October 19, 1901 he flew his airship "Number 6" over Paris from the Parc Saint
Cloud around the Eiffel Tower and back in under 30 minutes to win the Deutsch de la
Meurthe prize. Santos-Dumont went on to design and build several aircraft. Subsequent
controversy surrounding his and others' competing claims with regard to aircraft
overshadowed his unparalleled contributions to the development of airships.
2. Heavier than air
The Wright Flyer: the first sustained flight with a powered, controlled aircraft.
On December 17, 1903, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, the 1903 Wright Flyer became the
first powered, heavier-than-air machine to achieve controlled, sustained flight with a pilot
aboard. It flew forward without losing speed and landed at a point as high as that from which
it started.
With Orville Wright as pilot, the airplane took off from a launching rail and flew for 12
seconds and a distance of 37 meters (120 feet). The airplane was flown three more times
that day, with Orville and his brother Wilbur alternating as pilot. The longest flight, with Wilbur
at the controls, was 260 meters (852 feet) and lasted 59 seconds.
The Flyer, designed and built by the Wright brothers, was one step in a broad experimental
program that began in 1899 with their first kite and concluded in 1905, when they built the
first truly practical airplane. The basic problems of mechanical flight, lift, propulsion, and
control were solved in the Wright design.
Helicopter
Paul Cornu's helicopter, built in 1907, was the first flying machine to have risen from the
ground using rotating wings instead of fixed wings.
Seaplane
Early seaplane
The first powered seaplane was invented in March 1910 by the French engineer Henri
Fabre. Its name was Le Canard ('the duck'), and took off from the water and flew 800 meters
on its first flight on March 28, 1910. These experiments were closely followed by the aircraft
pioneers Gabriel and Charles Voisin, who purchased several of the Fabre floats and fitted
them to their Canard Voisin airplane. In October 1910, the Canard Voisin became the first
seaplane to fly over the river Seine, and in March 1912, the first seaplane to be used
militarily from a seaplane carrier, La Foudre ('the lightning').
i. Biplanes
British Sopwith Camel The Fokker Triplane flown by German
i. Autogiros
Autogiro in 1923
The autogiro was invented by the Spanish inventor Juan de la Cierva 1923. An autogiro is
lifted, not by wings, but by turning motor blades. A helicopter uses a powerful motor to turn
the rotors, an autogiro’ s rotors are turned round by the pressure of air as the plane flies
forward. The autogiro is pulled forward by propeller blades on the front like an ordinary small
plane. The autogiro can fly at up to 225 km/h, but cannot hover like a helicopter.
i. Bombers
B-29 Superfortress, a Heavy Bomber
In the 1930s Boeing built the B-17 ‘Flying Fortress’, with gun turrets to battle its
way through to targets even by day. The 1929, Curtis F8c Helldiver was the first
‘dive-bombs’ – designed to drop its bombs at the end of a long dive on targets
like aircraft carriers. German ‘Stuka’ dive-bombers gained a fearsome name in
the German invasions of 1939 .In December 1939 the heavy of British
Wellingtons showed that lightly armed bombers could not sustain daylight raids,
so the British switched to night raids. The ultra-light De Havilland Mosqito wasfast
enough to fly daylight raids. The dambusters were the Lancasters of 617
squadron of 1943 that attacked German dams with ‘bouncing bombs’. These
were around bombs designed by Barnes Wallis that bounced over the water
surface towards the target dams.Kamikaze (Japanese for ‘divine wind’) were
fighters loaded with bombs and gasoline which their pilots armed. The biggest
bomber was the Boeing B-29 Superfortress which could fly over 10,000 m up. In
the 1945, B-29s dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan.
ii. Fighters
In the dogfights of the Battle of Britain, the Spitfire’s 650 km/h top speed and
amazing agility proved decisive.
i. Airliners
Long-distance passenger aircraft, called airliners, began flying in the 1930s. The first
streamlined metal airliner, the Boeing 247, carried only 10 passengers, but planes soon
became bigger and more comfortable. They became faster, too, when jet engines were
installed in the 1950s. Then, in 1970, the first “jumbo” jet, the Boeing 747, was built. This
huge, wide-bodied plane can carry more than 500 people and is still the most popular airliner
for long-distance flights.
Boeing 247
Comet
The world’s first jet airliner, the De Havilland Comet, started flying in 1952, but it was
grounded for four years after a series of crashes. Investigators discovered that cracks were
appearing in the plane’s metal body, a problem known as metal fatigue. A safer Comet was
then built.
Jumbo Jets
Boeing 747
The second world’s largest airliner, the Boeing 747, is just over 70 m (232 ft)
long and has a wingspan of 65 m (213 ft). It can fly 566 passengers more
than 13,000 km (8000 miles) without stopping to refuel. During long flights,
passengers are given hot meals from the aircraft ‘s galleys, or kitchens.
8. 2001-Future
Global Hawk
Global Hawk
In the beginning of the 21st century, subsonic aviation focused on eliminating the pilot in
favor of remotely operated or completely autonomous vehicles. Several Unmanned aerial
vehicles or UAVs have been developed. In April 2001 the unmanned aircraft Global Hawk
flew from Edwards AFB in the US to Australia non-stop and unrefuelled. This is the longest
point-to-point flight ever undertaken by an unmanned aircraft, and took 23 hours and 23
minutes. In October 2003 the first totally autonomous flight across the Atlantic by a
computer-controlled model aircraft occurred.
Airbus
i. Web Address
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviation_history
http://www.first-to-fly.com/History/History%20of%20Airplane/history.htm
http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blairplane.htm
ii. Books
1000 Things You Should Know About, Buildings And Transport,2003,
Miles Kelly Publishing Ltd.
iii. Encyclopedia
Disney Children’s Encyclopedia, Transport, 2003, Neil Morris