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Published byMagdalen Ford Modified over 8 years ago
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Discovering Flight
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Chapter 1, Lesson 1 ReviewReview Humans have dreamed of taking flight for thousands of years Some early inventors made devices of lightweight material such as cloth or wood, in imitation of birds’ or bats’ wings The Chinese invented the kite around 1000 BC They also invented gunpowder and rockets
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Chapter 1, Lesson 1 ReviewReview Leonardo da Vinci produced the first known designs for a parachute and a helicopter Da Vinci also researched the idea of a glider and some designs for ornithopters There are two phases of bird flight—a ground phase and a lift phase
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Chapter 1, Lesson 1 ReviewReview Wings are designed to make air flow faster over their tops This makes the pressure drop and the wings move upward, defying the force of gravity— this is known as Bernoullian lift or induced lift Newton’s third law of motion states, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction” This reaction provides some additional lift, known as Newtonian or dynamic lift
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Chapter 1, Lesson 1 ReviewReview By now you’re beginning to understand that birds and airplanes don’t work exactly alike: Airplanes are fixed-wing aircraft and rely on their propellers to get them off the ground
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The Early Days of Flight
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Chapter 1, Lesson 2 ReviewReview A balloon operates on the principle of buoyancy The work of the Montgolfier brothers, Joseph and Étienne, led to the first balloon flight with humans aboard A dirigible is a steerable airship with rudders and propellers
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Chapter 1, Lesson 2 ReviewReview Most historians give Henri Giffard credit for inventing the first successful dirigible Alberto Santos-Dumont helped spark interest in aviation worldwide Count von Zeppelin’s invention of the first successful rigid dirigible led to the world’s first commercial airships
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Chapter 1, Lesson 2 ReviewReview Otto Lilienthal of Germany is often called the “Father of Modern Aviation” Despite his failures, Samuel Langley made important contributions to aviation Langley Air Force Base in southeastern Virginia is named after him
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The Wright Brothers
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Chapter 2, Lesson 1 ReviewReview The Wrights choose a glider as their starting point They began in July 1899 with an unmanned box kite Between 1900 and 1902, the brothers built three gliders—first flying them like a kite, then putting a man aboard
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Chapter 2, Lesson 1 ReviewReview The Wright Brothers read information written by Samuel Pierpont Langley and Octave Chanute Once the Wrights had resolved questions about lift and control, they set out to fit their plane with an engine
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Chapter 2, Lesson 1 ReviewReview On 17 December 1903 Orville made the first controlled, sustained, heavier-than- air human flight with a powered aircraft at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina The brothers controlled their craft through three main means: The forward elevator The use of wing warping A single, movable rear rudder
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Chapter 2, Lesson 1 ReviewReview On 22 May 1906 the brothers received a government patent for their invention On 10 February 1908 they sold the Wright Flyer to the US government It took a while for the Army to decide how to use airplanes during war Airplanes needed improvements to make them faster, sturdier, and more reliable
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Developing Aircraft
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Chapter 2, Lesson 2 ReviewReview The first powered dirigible in America was equipped with a Glenn Curtiss engine Louis Blériot was the first man to build and fly a powered monoplane A multiengine plane had greater power, reliability, and safety than a single-engine plane Laurent and Gustav Seguin of France invented rotary engines that used circulating air rather than water
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Chapter 2, Lesson 2 ReviewReview Calbraith Perry Rodgers made the first airplane crossing of the United States from coast to coast PFC Vernon Burge was the first enlisted man to become a pilot Bessie Coleman became the first black woman to get a pilot’s license
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Chapter 2, Lesson 2 ReviewReview Blanche Stuart Scott was the first American woman to solo in a fixed-wing airplane Harriet Quimby was the first American woman to earn her pilot’s license Bessica Medlar Raiche, Matilde Moisant, Julia Clark, and Katherine and Marjorie Stinson were also famous female aviators of the period
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Chapter 2, Lesson 2
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Air Power in World War I
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Chapter 2, Lesson 3 ReviewReview During World War I, aircraft had important functions—from doing aerial reconnaissance to shooting down enemy aircraft Four American pilots who made significant contributions in World War I were Raoul Lufbery, Eddie Rickenbacker, Frank Luke, and Eugene Bullard While the United States never built more than a handful of airplanes during the war years, it did provide considerable manpower in the air
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Chapter 2, Lesson 3 ReviewReview The airplane reshaped the way countries fight wars more quickly than any other weapon in military history Another WWI innovation was the airplane-mounted machine gun The Germans asked Dutchman Anthony Fokker to improve it—he built an interrupting gear
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Chapter 2, Lesson 3 ReviewReview During World War I, airplanes offered possibilities that challenged age-old warfare strategies By 1918 three specialized types of aircraft had emerged: the fighter, the observation aircraft, and the bomber Billy Mitchell believed strongly in the future of aviation as an instrument in warfare
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