AdamsAdams is the name of a number of places in the United States and Canada, as well as a common surname. PlacesUnited States
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Also Adams surname on Genealogy at wikicities. Other uses of Adams
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Also Adams surname on Genealogy at wikicities. Business jets are typically flown by commercial pilots, although there is a new generation of small jets arriving soon for private pilots. Similar place names include:. Piston-powered propeller aircraft (single-engine or twin-engine) are especially common for both private and commercial general aviation, but even private pilots occasionally own and operate helicopters like the Bell JetRanger or turboprops like the Beechcraft King Air. . Commercial general aviation pilots use aircraft for a wide range of tasks, such as flight training, pipeline surveying, passenger and freight transport, policing, crop dusting, and medical transport (medevac). Adams is the name of a number of places in the United States and Canada, as well as a common surname. Usually these private pilots own their own aircraft and take out loans from banks or specialized lenders to purchase them. Adams is Group Sounds band. Private pilots use aircraft primarily for personal travel, business travel, or recreation. Adams, Ilocos Norte, a municipality in the Philippines. Within general aviation, the major distinction is between private flights (where the pilot is not paid for time or expenses) and commercial flights (where the pilot is paid by a customer or employer). Johann Friedrich Adam, botanist and author. The vast majority of flights flown around the world each day belong to the general aviation category, ranging from recreational balloon flying to civilian flight training to business trips to firefighting to medevac flights to cargo transportation on freight aircraft. Adams is a well-known brand of jockstrap. Civil aviation includes both scheduled airline flights and general aviation, a catch-all covering other kinds of private and commercial use. Adams (brig), USS Adams. By the time of the Vietnam War, helicopters had come into widespread military use, especially for transporting and supporting ground troops. Robert Adams of London, designer of a mid-19th century revolver. Tankers were developed after World War II to refuel other aircraft in mid-air, thus increasing their operational range. Adams (automobile), an early 20th century automobile. In order to prevent the enemy from bombing, fighter aircraft were developed to intercept and shoot down enemy aircraft. Adams (lunar crater). During World War I many types of aircraft were adapted for attacking the ground or enemy vehicles/ships/guns/aircraft, and the first aircraft designed as bombers were born. Samuel Adams (beer). Combat aircraft themselves, though used a handful of times for reconnaissance and surveillance during the Italo-Turkish War, did not come into widespread use until the Balkan War when first air-dropped bomb was invented and widely used by Bulgarian air force against Turkey. Alice Adams, a novel by Booth Tarkington. In the past, gliders and balloons have also been used as military aircraft; for example, balloons were used for observation during the American Civil War and World War I, and cargo gliders were used during World War II to land intruding German troops in many European countries in the 1940/42 period, while Allied troops used them in Europe after D-Day . Adams Park, a football stadium in England. Even the little fabric-covered two-seater Piper J3 Cub had a military version, the L-4 liaison, observation and trainer aircraft. Adams Grammar School. military and the Dakota in Britain and the Commonwealth. William Adams, navigator. Many civil aircraft have been produced in separate models for military use, such as the civil Douglas DC-3 airliner, which became the military C-47/C-53/R4D transport in the U.S. Victoria Adams, singer. Combat aircraft like fighters or bombers represent only a minority of the category. Tony Adams (footballer), English footballer. The major distinction in aircraft usage is between military aviation, which includes all uses of aircraft for military purposes (such as combat, patrolling, search and rescue, reconnaissance, transport, and training), and civil aviation, which includes all uses of aircraft for non-military purposes. Tony Adams (actor), British actor. They are restricted to rather specialised niches, such as spaceflight, where no oxygen is available for combustion (rockets carry their own oxygen). Thomas Adams (architect), urban planner. Rocket aircraft have occasionally been experimented with. Thomas Adams (politician), Continental Congressman. In addition to turbine engines like the turboprop and turbojet, other types of high-altitude, high-performance engines have included the ramjet and the pulse jet. Scott Adams (game designer), computer game designer and programmer. Helicopters also typically use turbine engines. Scott Adams, cartoonist. Pressurised aircraft, however, are more likely to use the turbine engine, since it is naturally efficient at higher altitudes and can operate above 40,000 ft. Samuel Adams (naval officer), American naval officer. During the forties and especially following the 1973 energy crisis, development work was done on propellers with swept tips or even scimitar-shaped blades for use in high-speed commercial and military transports. Samuel Adams (governor), former Governor of Arkansas. Piston engines normally become less efficient above 7,000-8,000 ft (2100-2400 m) above sea level because there is less oxygen available for combustion; to solve that problem, some piston engines have mechanically powered compressors (blowers) or turbine-powered turbochargers or turbonormalizers that compress the air before feeding it into the engine; these piston engines can often operate efficiently at 20,000 ft (6100 m) above sea level or higher, altitudes that require the use of supplemental oxygen or cabin pressurisation. Samuel Adams, American revolutionary. Piston engines typically operate using avgas or regular gasoline, though some new ones are being designed to operate on diesel or jet fuel. Sam Adams (football player), American football player. Water cooled V engines, as used in automobiles, were common in high speed aircraft, until they were replaced by jet and turbine power. Ryan Adams, singer. (See also: Aircraft engine.) The piston engine is still used in the majority of aircraft produced, since it is efficient at the lower altitudes used by small aircraft, but the radial engine (with the cylinders arranged in a circle around the crankshaft) has largely given way to the horizontally-opposed engine (with the cylinders lined up on two sides of the crankshaft). Robert Adams of London, British firearms inventor. Until World War II, the internal combustion piston engine was virtually the only type of propulsion used for powered aircraft. Robert Adams - American photographer. Airships combine a balloon's buoyancy with some kind of propulsion, usually propeller driven. Richard Adams (author). For gliders, takeoff takes place from a high location, or the aircraft is pulled into the air by a ground-based winch or vehicle, or towed aloft by a powered "tug" aircraft. actor. Balloons drift with the wind, though normally the pilot can control the altitude either by heating the air or by releasing ballast, giving some directional control (since the wind direction changes with altitude). Nick Adams, U.S. Some types of aircraft, such as the balloon or glider, do not have any propulsion. Neal Adams, comic book artist. These designs may have potential but are not yet practical. Milivi Adams, cancer patient. And finally the flapping-wing ornithopter is a category of its own. Michael Adams, chess grandmaster. It is (2005) in development in the United Kingdom. Maud Adams, Bond girl. This uses a fixed wing with a forced airflow produced by cylindrical fans mounted above. Katherine Adams, British MP. A recent innovation is a completely new class of aircraft, the fan wing. President. A further category might encompass the wing-in-ground-effect types, for example the Russian ekranoplan also nicknamed the "Caspian Sea Monster" and hovercraft; most of the latter employing a skirt and achieving limited ground or water clearance to reduce friction and achieve speeds above those achieved by boats of similar weight. John Quincy Adams, U.S. Some craft have reaction-powered rotors with gas jets at the tips but most have one or more lift rotors powered from engine-driven shafts. John Luther Adams, composer. The best-known examples are the helicopter, the autogyro and the tiltrotor aircraft (such as the V-22 Osprey). John Couch Adams, mathematician. Here, the lift is provided by rotating aerofoils or rotors. John Coolidge Adams, composer. A second category of aerodynamically lifted aircraft are the rotary-wing aircraft. John Adams (mutineer). So far the only significant practical application of the lifting body is in the Space Shuttle, but many aircraft generate lift from nothing other than wings alone. President. The lifting body configuration is where the body itself produce lift. John Adams, U.S. A variable geometry ('swing-wing') has also been employed in a few examples of combat aircraft (the F-111, Panavia Tornado, F-14 Tomcat and B-1 Lancer, among others). Herbert Baxter Adams, historian and educator. the B-2 Spirit). Henry Adams, historian and novelist. Other possibilities include the delta-wing, where lift and horizontal control surfaces are often combined, and the flying wing, where there is no separate vertical control surface (e.g. Gerry Adams, Irish politician. This is principally an improvement in structures and not aerodynamics. journalist. Subsequently most aircraft are monoplanes. Franklin Pierce Adams, U.S. The number of lift surfaces varied in the pre-1950 period, as biplanes (two wings) and triplanes (three wings) were numerous in the early days of aviation. Dirk Diggler, adult film stage name for Eddie Adams. Canards are becoming more common as supersonic aerodynamics grows more mature and because the forward surface contributes lift during straight-and-level flight. Eddie Adams (photographer). The other configuration is the canard where small horizontal control surfaces are placed forward of the wings, near the nose of the aircraft. Douglas Adams, author. In a "conventional" configuration, the lift surfaces are placed in front of a control surface or tailplane. actor. Much aerodynamic work was done with kites until test aircraft, wind tunnels and now computer modelling programs became available. Don Adams, U.S. Kites depend upon the tension between the cord which anchors it to the ground and the force of the wind currents. Clifford Adams, computer programmer. The forerunner of these type of aircraft is the kite. Clifford Adams (composer). Among aerodynamically lifted aircraft, most fall in the category of fixed-wing aircraft, where horizontal airfoils produce lift, by profiting from airflow patterns determined by Bernoulli's equation and, to some extent, the Coanda effect. Christian Adams, oenologist, terrorist victim. With engine lift, the aircraft defeats gravity by use of vertical Examples of engine lift aircraft are rockets, and VTOL aircraft such as the Hawker-Siddeley Harrier. Charles Francis Adams (disambiguation). In the case of aerodynamic lift, the aircraft is kept in the air by wings or rotors (see aerodynamics). actress. In heavier-than-air aircraft, there are two ways to produce lift: aerodynamic lift and engine lift. Cecily Adams, U.S. Several accidents, such as the Hindenburg fire at Lakehurst, NJ, in 1937 led to the demise of large rigid airships. Cecil Adams, author. The most successful type of rigid airship was the Zeppelin. Bryan Adams, singer. Examples of lighter-than-air aircraft include non-steerable balloons, such as hot air balloons and gas balloons, and steerable airships (sometimes called dirigible balloons) such as blimps (that have non-rigid construction) and rigid airships that have an internal frame. Bristow Adams, journalist, forester, professor, illustrator. A first division by design among aircraft is between lighter-than-air, aerostat, and heavier-than-air aircraft, aerodyne. politician. Below, we describe classifications by design, propulsion and usage. Brockman Adams, U.S. There are several ways to classify aircraft. Ben Adams, singer, businessman. Aircraft fall into two broad categories:. Ansel Adams, photographer. . First Lady. An aircraft is any machine capable of atmospheric flight. Abigail Adams, U.S. The distinction between a balloon and an airship is that an airship has some means of controlling both its forward motion and steering itself, while balloons are carried along with the wind. Adamsville. In particular, these aircraft use a relatively low density gas such as helium, hydrogen or heated air, to displace the air around the craft. Adamstown. Aerostats use buoyancy to float in the air in much the same manner as ships float on the water. Adamsdale. Lighter than air aerostats: hot air balloons and airships. Adamsburg. Mainly used internationally. Adams Township. STOL stands for Short Take Off and Landing. Adams County. The abbreviation VTOL is applied to aircraft other than helicopters that can take off or land vertically. North Adams. Helicopters and autogyros use a spinning rotor (a rotary wing) to provide lift; helicopters also use the rotor to provide thrust. Adams, Saskatchewan. For a glider to maintain its forward speed it must descend in relation to the air (but not necessarily in relation to the ground). Adams Camp, Quebec. Exceptions are gliders which have no engines and gain their thrust, initially, from winches or tugs and then from gravity and thermal currents. Adams, Quebec. The movement of air over the airfoil produces lift that causes the aircraft to fly. Adams Apple, Ontario. Fixed-wing aircraft generally use an internal-combustion engine in the form of a piston engine (with a propeller) or a turbine engine (jet or turboprop), to provide thrust that moves the craft forward through the air. Adams Island, Nunavut. Heavier than air aerodynes, including autogyros, helicopters and variants, and conventional fixed-wing aircraft: aeroplanes in Commonwealth English (excluding Canada), airplanes in North American English. Adams Cove, Newfoundland and Labrador. Adams Gulch, New Brunswick. Adams Lake, British Columbia. Adams Landing, Alberta. Adams Township, South Dakota. Adams Township, Pennsylvania. Adams Township, Ohio. Adams Township, Nebraska. Adams Township, North Dakota. Adams Township, Missouri. Adams Township, Minnesota. Adams Township, Michigan. Adams Township, Kansas. Adams Township, Indiana. Adams Township, Illinois. Adams Township, Iowa. Adams, West Virginia. Adams, Jackson County, Wisconsin, town. Adams, Green County, Wisconsin, town. Adams, Adams County, Wisconsin, town. Adams, Wisconsin, city. Adams, Tennessee. Adams, Pennsylvania. Adams, Oregon. Adams, Oklahoma. Adams Center, New York. Adams, New York (village). Adams, New York (town). Adams, New Jersey. Adams, Nebraska. Adams, North Dakota. Adams, Mississippi. Adams, Minnesota. Adams, Maine. Adams, Massachusetts. Adams, Kentucky. Adams, Kansas. Adams, Indiana. Adams, Illinois. Adams, Florida. Adams, Alabama. |