- Elevator (aircraft)
Elevators are control surfaces, usually at the rear of an
aircraft , which control the aircraft's orientation by changing the pitch of the aircraft, and so also theangle of attack of the wing. An increased wing angle of attack will cause a greater lift to be produced by the profile of thewing , and a slowing of the aircraft speed. A decrease in angle of attack will produce an increase in speed. The elevators may be the only pitch control surface present (and are then called astabilator ), or may be hinged to a fixed or adjustable surface called a stabilizer.The rear wing to which elevators are attached have the opposite effect to a wing. They usually create a "downward" pressure which counters the unbalanced
moment due to the airplane'scentre of gravity not being located exactly on the resultingcentre of pressure , which in addition to the lift generated by the main wing includes the effects of drag and enginethrust . An elevator decreases or increases the downward force created by the rear wing. An increased downward force, produced by "up" elevator, forces the tail down and the nose up so the aircraft speed is reduced (i.e. the wing will operate at a higher angle of attack, which produces a greaterlift coefficient , so that the required lift is produced by a lower speed). A decreased downward force at the tail, produced by "down" elevator, allows the tail to rise and the nose to lower. The resulting lower wing angle of attack provides a lower lift coefficient, so the craft must move faster (either by adding power or going into a descent) to produce the required lift. The setting of the elevator thus determines the airplane's "trim speed" - a given elevator position has only one speed at which the aircraft will maintain a constant (unaccelerated) condition.In some aircraft pitch-control surfaces are in the front, ahead of the wing; this type of configuration is called a canard, the French word for
duck . TheWright Brothers ' early aircraft were of this type. The canard type is more efficient, since the forward surface usually is required to produce upward lift (instead of downward force as with the usual empennage) to balance the net pitching moment. The main wing is also less likely to stall, as the forward control surface is configured to stall before the wing, causing a pitch down and reducing the angle of attack of the wing.Supersonic aircraft haveall-moving tailplane s, because early supersonic flight research revealed that shock waves generated on the trailing edge oftailplane s, rendered hinged elevators ineffective.Delta wing ed aircraft combine bothaileron and elevator inputs into one control surface, called anelevon .
Plane_control_and_motion._The_movement_of_the_rudder_in_this_animation_is_opposite_from_what_it_really_is.Image:elevator.curriewot.arp.750pix.jpg|The_surface_immediately_behind_the_final_A_of_the_registration_G-ASBA_is_the_horizontal_stabilizer._The_drooped_surface_hinged_to_it,_nearly_touching_the_grass,_is_the_elevator. The aircraft is a 1966 Currie Wot
The_tail_of_a_Lufthansa_Airbus_A319_in_flight,_showing_the_elevator (Stab. means Stabiliser)Airbus . The elevator is the silver surface on the right hand side of the picture, immediately below the red pipes on the factory wall
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