CURRENT POSTS | ARCHIVES

Friday Fly of the Week: Paper Airplane Facts!

Friday, April 23rd, 2010 at 12:37 am

Speaking of airplanes, ActionJetz has launched its new line of diecast airplane toys. Check them out here.

Today, you will discover the many interesting facts about a paper airplane. The paper can’t be just any ordinary paper plane. It can have lots of designs. Check out what other people have done with their paper airplanes:

The Smallest Paper Airplane
The smallest origami paper model of a Crane Bird was folded under a microscope using tweezers by Mr. Naito from Japan and was made from a piece of paper 2.9 mm square. It is displayed on top of a sewing needle. Wow! That’s small – only problem is, it didn’t fly!

Upside Down Paper Airplane Flying
Any kind of paper aircraft that is trimmed to fly on earth will, when thrown inside a spacecraft, fly up and not down, as would normally be expected. This is because there is no gravity in the spacecraft, but there is lift created by the wings, as they fly in the atmosphere inside the spacecraft.

Fly on Forever
In space where there is no atmosphere, if a paper aircraft were thrown it would not fly at all; it would float away in a straight line. With no gravity to pull it down, it would possibly fly on forever until it hit an object.

Most Expensive – One of NASA’s
One of the most expensive and lightest paper aircraft ever flown, was the paper aircraft thrown inside one of NASA’s space shuttles, during a routine space flight. The fuel alone used to carry it into space makes that paper aircraft one of the most expensive. It was the lightest because of the lack of gravity in space.


This entry was posted on Friday, April 23rd, 2010 at 12:37 am and is filed under Airplane Trivia, Arts and Crafts for Kids. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply