Aileron


 
 

Ailerons are hinged flaps attached to the trailing edge of an airplane wing, usually near the wingtips. They are used to control the aircraft in roll. The two ailerons are interconnected so that one goes down when the other goes up: the downgoing aileron increases the lift on its wing while the upgoing aileron reduces the lift on the other wing, producing a rolling moment about the aircraft's longitudinal axis. The word aileron is French for "little wing."

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An unwanted side-effect of aileron operation is adverse yaw - a yawing moment in the opposite direction to the turn generated by the ailerons. In other words, using the ailerons to roll an aircraft to the right would produce a yawing motion to the left. The yaw occurs because the down-going aileron will increase the angle of attack of the upgoing wing, increasing both lift and drag (Form + Induced). Conversely, the wing with the upgoing aileron will see a small increase in drag (Form), as well as the intended reduction in lift.

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Adverse yaw can be countered with the aircraft's rudder (a co-ordinated turn), but can also be reduced with clever design. If the upgoing aileron moves further upwards than the downgoing aileron moves down, it will create extra profile drag on that wing and try to yaw the aircraft into the turn. This set-up is known as "differential aileron". Another solution is to use a "Frise aileron", where the up going aileron also projects a section downwards below the wing, again increasing drag on the inside of the turn.

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Modern airliners tend to have a second set of inboard ailerons much closer to the fuselage, which are used at high speeds. Some aircraft use spoilers to achieve the same effect as ailerons.

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The device was developed independently by the Aerial Experiment Association, headed by Alexander Graham Bell, and by Robert Esnault-Pelterie, a french airplane builder. Ailerons superseded the earlier wing warping technique, developed by the Wright Brothers.

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Airplane: REDIRECT Fixed-wing aircraft...

Wing: In computing, WinG (pronounced Win Gee) was an API to provide fast graphics performance on Windows 3.1. It was later built-in to Windows 95. In Win32, the equivalent of WinG functionality is provided via API calls such as CreateDIBSection(), SetDIBColorTable(), BitBlt(), and StretchBlt()....

Roll: The word roll has these meanings:...

~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
See also
External links
 


 

~ Related Subjects ~

French (1) - Wing warping (1) - Alexander Graham Bell (1) - Robert Esnault-Pelterie (1) - Wright Brothers (1) - Windows 95 (1) - Win32 (1) - API (1) - Windows 3.1 (1) - Roll (1) - Lift (1) - Airplane (1) - Wing (1) - Moment (1) - Angle of attack (1) -
 

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