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by turtledragonfly
849 days ago
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I think what they were saying is that from a pure "Newton's 3rd law" standpoint, if the plane has an upwards force, then the air has a corresponding downward force, which must go somewhere. Yes, it is spread out and complicated and turbulent, etc, but ultimately must balance out. If we could somehow "draw a box around" the entire plane+air system, then the plane's upward lift will create a corresponding downward force on the box, one way or another. So, in the broad sense that you push the earth away from you when you jump, the plane also pushes the earth away from it when it flies (mediated by a bunch of fluid dynamics). Or, classic example: if a (sealed) truck full of birds is jostled so that they start flying, does the truck weigh less? [1] [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVeP6oqH-Qo&t=35s |
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