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tamcap

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tamcap
·قبل 6 أشهر·discuss
This clarification is missing from many others sources (such as the AP one I saw from a local news source): https://www.wral.com/news/ap/9b8df-us-drops-the-number-of-va... .

What you are describing is a somewhat routine adjustment and if it's non-inferior... sure. But it sure reads differently in different sources...
tamcap
·قبل 6 أشهر·discuss
The thesis was known from the very beginning. The rest is just window dressing to justify the outcome.

I still scratch my head about some no-brainer vaccines such as HPV. All upsides, prevents the literal cancer. No downsides.
tamcap
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
> It has a cruise speed of about 200 km/h (\(124\) mph), a payload of \(350\) kg (\(770\) lbs), and a range of approximately 300 km (\(186\) miles)

While it’s a real plane, I think we can both agree this is more of a prototype than what the general public would consider to be a passenger plane.

Yes, energy recovery is possible. It’s not happening currently in commercial aviation.
tamcap
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
You can use a turbine to generate electricity, so yes, you are converting potential energy into electrical potential. However, no real mass produced passenger plane today can use that electricity for flight (thrust).

RAT is only used when sh*t hits the fan. Even then, it can help you power some hydraulics / electrical, not “store” energy for further flight.

The OP asked - in a low fuel situation, can the energy spent on a climb get effectively recovered - and the answer is not really. We convert as much as we can into unpowered (low-powered) descent. But once you are at a spot where you make a final decision to land or not, you are by design low and slow - and all that energy you had 15m ago is gone.

If you need to keep flying, those engines need to spool back up. And that takes fuel.
tamcap
·قبل 9 أشهر·discuss
Not really. While you have a large potential energy buildup at a higher altitude, you cannot "bank it" / "save it" on descent. There is no way to store it in batteries or convert it back into fuel.

One of the challenges of aeronautics is the efficient disposition of the potential energy without converting it all into kinetic energy (ie speed) so that the landing happens at an optimally low speed - thus giving you a chance to brake and slow down at the end.