balloons vs. airplanes

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BALLOONS VS. AIRPLANES In Depth

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In Depth. Balloons VS. Airplanes. What I Need. Form the room like a college classroom. Have all eyes and ears focused on my two cheerleaders. Each team of cheerleaders will get five minutes to explain why the airplane or balloon is the best. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Balloons VS. Airplanes

BALLOONS VS. AIRPLANESIn Depth

Page 2: Balloons VS. Airplanes

What I Need

Form the room like a college classroom.

Have all eyes and ears focused on my two cheerleaders.

Each team of cheerleaders will get five minutes to explain why the airplane or balloon is the best.

Then each team of cheerleaders gets three minutes for a counter argument

The audience decides who wins

Page 3: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Team Airplane

Page 4: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Team Balloon

Page 5: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Counter Argument time!!!!

Page 6: Balloons VS. Airplanes

The Winner Is…

Page 7: Balloons VS. Airplanes

A brief history on the Hot Air Balloon

And Now…

Page 8: Balloons VS. Airplanes

The first hot air balloon ride occurred in France during the late 18th century. On November 21, a 25 minute flight was made over Paris by Pilatre d’Rozier and Francois d’Arlandes. However, these men did not invent the balloon.

“Historians agree, however, that the first true powered flightwith humans on board was in a hot air balloon” –AE Module 1

Page 9: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Montgolfier Brothers….

Once upon a time, two well-educated men were reading about properties of air. They get the idea that “Hey! We should play with fire!” They took a bag of silk, lit a fire underneath the bag, and slowly watched it rise because of the buoyancy. Why did the bag rise?

Page 10: Balloons VS. Airplanes

HEAT RISES!!!!! (no way)

Page 11: Balloons VS. Airplanes

What is Buoyancy?

Page 12: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Buoyancy

The Hot air balloon is buoyant because it is filled with hot air. Since heat rises, the balloon is able to float. But how does it generate hot air?

Page 13: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Example Time!!!!!!!!!!!!

Page 14: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Brief History on the Airplane

Page 15: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Deadalus and Icarus

Once upon a time, two prisoners, a father and son, named Icarus and Deadalus. Both men were prisoners on an island. They eventually grew tired of being imprisoned, and planned an escape. They covered their arms with wax and feathers, and soon flew off into the unknown. However, Icarus’ father told him not to fly too close to the sun, because the wax would melt, but like every teen, he did not listen to his parent. Soon he flew too close, the wax melted, and he died.

Page 16: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Happy History Time.

Objectives: Who was Daniel Bernoulli and Sir Isaac Newton?

Can anyone tell me?

Page 17: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Daniel Bernoulli

Discovered the relationship between pressure and fluids in motion. It became the cornerstone of the Airfoil Lift Theory.

Page 18: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Airfoil Lift Theory

Daniel found that like air in motion, fluid had a constant pressure. When fluid is accelerated, pressure drops. Thus, wings in an airplane are designed to make air flow go faster over the top of the wing.

As velocity increases, pressure decreases.

Can you provide examples?

Page 19: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Sir Isaac Newton

In my last class, I briefly went over the Three Laws of Motion.

Can you recall any of them?

Page 20: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Three Laws of motion in Depth

Page 21: Balloons VS. Airplanes

An object at rest will remain at rest unless

acted upon by an outside force. Or an object will go about it’s merry way

unless acted upon by an outside force. In my last example, I had Morikawa hold

my rocket in motion, my hand was the outside force that stopped it from going it’s merry way.

Another example: if an F-22 is flying towards a target, shoots at the target in motion, and the target goes flying downwards, the F-22 ammo is the outside force to that target.

Page 22: Balloons VS. Airplanes

F=M*A

The net force of an object is equal to the rate of change

where F is the net force applied, m is the mass of the body, and a is the body's acceleration. Thus, the net force applied to a body produces a proportional acceleration. In other words, if a body is accelerating, then there is a force on it.

Page 23: Balloons VS. Airplanes

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction

In every interaction, there is a pair of forces acting on the two interacting objects. The size of the forces on the first object equals the size of the force on the second object. The direction of the force on the first object is opposite to the direction of the force on the second object. Forces always come in pairs - equal and opposite action-reaction force pairs.

Page 24: Balloons VS. Airplanes

ADVENTURE TIME!!

Page 25: Balloons VS. Airplanes

Objectives

Put the chairs on the SIDE of the room.

Prepare for your minds to be blown