Aerofoil in a sentence as a noun

Ditto 'aerofoil', etc.'Aero' is a Greek prefix pertaining to 'flight'.

How accurately has this wing been manufactured to correct aerofoil shape?

I figure a rigid wing can have a more efficient aerofoil than an ultralight would do, plus these seem to go a fair bit faster.

Antigravity machines that let you fly and hover without aerofoils or rockets?

Sometimes the turbine housing, or a section of a stabiliser aerofoil looks quite aeroplaney.

>There are a lot of problems for which you effectively have limitless data.>For example, optimizing the shape of an aerofoil, wing, wind turbine, ship, pump, etc.

This is clearly explained in a segment of The Blind Watchmaker [1], where generations of an aerofoil shape are varied at random, but selected for their lift potential.

Air suspension?Helicopters are aerodynes just like fixed-wing aircraft, deriving lift from aerofoil speed.

For example, the "equal-transit-time explanation of aerofoil lift".

> equal-transit-time explanation of aerofoil liftSeems like flying an airplane upside down disproves that explanation pretty quickly.

Like the lift effect of an aerofoil, much of it comes from entrainment: the phenomenon that the device is basically causing the moving air to stick to it and then "throwing" that air at an altered angle which generates thrust.

It works using an impeller in the base and it feeds the air through a thin gap in an annulus shaped aerofoil.\nStrictly speaking you could argue that impellers have blades and all they've done is conceal them inside the base rather than remove them entirely.

Aerofoil definitions

noun

a device that provides reactive force when in motion relative to the surrounding air; can lift or control a plane in flight

See also: airfoil surface