Lift Memes

Posts tagged with Lift

Could You Please Explain More Than Just Bernoulli?

Could You Please Explain More Than Just Bernoulli?
Every physics student's nightmare: sitting through yet another oversimplified explanation of flight. Teachers love to say "Bernoulli's principle causes lift because faster air on top creates lower pressure" and call it a day. But mention Newton's Third Law or boundary layer separation? Suddenly they're playing the Uno "Draw 25" card! The reality of aerodynamics involves complex vortex systems, circulation theory, and the Coanda effect—but good luck getting that in Intro Physics. It's like explaining a symphony by only talking about the flute section.

The Magic Of Flight (According To Tired Engineers)

The Magic Of Flight (According To Tired Engineers)
The eternal struggle between sensationalist headlines and actual science! When Scientific American claims "No One Can Explain Why Planes Stay in the Air," aerospace engineers everywhere collectively facepalm so hard they generate lift. The engineer's explanation? Just "magic" - because apparently explaining Bernoulli's principle, airfoil dynamics, and pressure differentials for the 800th time gets exhausting. Sometimes it's easier to just say "the plane stays up because of very important magic" than to watch someone's eyes glaze over during your passionate explanation of fluid dynamics. Next week: "Scientists baffled by how magnets work" while physicists quietly contemplate career changes.

They're The Same Picture: Physics Edition

They're The Same Picture: Physics Edition
The corporate world wants you to spot the difference between two aircraft with identical wing areas, but physics students know better. While the shapes differ dramatically, both planes generate the same lift because—surprise!—wing area is what matters for lift calculation, not the shape. This is the aerodynamic equivalent of saying "2+2=4" and "1+3=4" are different equations. Engineers are silently screaming somewhere. Next time your boss asks you to find "meaningful differences" in identical quarterly reports, just remember: sometimes there truly is no difference, no matter how much management wants one.