rajeshmarndi said:
how does the air above an aerofoil(wing of an aircraft) move faster than the bottom surface just by increasing the angle up of the aerofoil.
even if the upper surface and lower surface distance are same i.e not campered or symmetrical.
An aircraft wing creates lift by deflecting air mass downwards.
That is, an aircraft wing creates lift by accelerating a large amount of air mass downwards.
Aircraft wings have their distinctive cross section (aerofoil shape) for efficiency. The aerofoil shape is not a
necessity for lift. It's better, it's more efficient, but not a necessity.
The crudest "wing" is a flat panel, at an angle to the direction of travel.
Example: while it's unwise to stick your hand out the window of a car at speed, if you do so you will feel the lift if you make your hand flat and at an angle to the air rushing by.
(Aircrafts that are designed for aerial acrobatics have pretty much flat panels for wings: that is why they can fly inverted almost just as well as the right side up. The purpose of the aerofoil shape is to induce a flow pattern where the air does not go into turbulence. The more turbulence, the less efficient.)
Returning to the original question:
Air mass is accelerated downward. That is, the trajectory of the air mass relative to the wing is curvilinear. The air mass under the wing can be thought of as moving along the inside of the curve, the air mass over the wing moving along the outside of the curve. What the aerofoil shape facilitates is that the airflow doesn't detach from the upper surface of the wing. Presumably the airflow doesn't detach because a
sudden change of air flow direction is avoided.
The air mass that moves over the wing travels faster than the air mass moving under the wing. It follows that some force accelerates the air mass that flows over the wing. Presumably a pressure difference is providing the force for that acceleration. This is a subject where different people can disagree about what they identify as cause and what as effect. What is the causal chain?
I have seen people argue that the lift
follows from the fact that the air mass over the wings moves faster.
The causal chain that I see is:
- Air mass is deflected downward
- This downward deflection lowers air pressure above the wing, near the trailing edge.
- The lower air pressure in the area above the wing, near the trailing edge, provides the force that accelerates the over-the-wing air flow.