IF the 'plane wont move then why is the "conveyor belt" so bloody big??
I still say the aeroplane WILL take off.
Cheers Rod
Remember the simplest of rules.
An object at rest remains at rest...
Well that has a significant part in this!
The moment (exact as worded) the wheel begins to turn, the conveyor matches the speed.
End result - light speed!
All other factors aside, we can not remain inside the boundaries of the question AS ASKED and therefore can not answer it if it is attempted. Therefore it does NOT fly as we can not power up without breech of the PreAssumptions.
IF the 'plane wont move then why is the "conveyor belt" so bloody big??
I still say the aeroplane WILL take off.
Cheers Rod
The definitive answer. It is a jump jet and the pilot is just waiting for clearance befofe angling the jets for vertices take off.
The moment the jets provided thrust and the wheel tried to roll, the belt instantly matches it (1st impossibility)... this immediately goes into melt down as the PLC ramps to the belt to light speed (2nd impossibility).
The requirement is that the wheels stay in place to comply with the question preassumptions (3rd impossibility)
See? To meet the question criteria it can not happen.
I can see it , but open ended questions are open too interpretation to suit .
The sensible versions of this question are intended to test people's understanding of some basic physics and the principles of flight.
Badly worded versions like the one at the start of this thread just encourage people to turn it into something that the original version never intended. It just becomes an argument about something unrelated to the way planes fly and take off.
If the question is worded sensibly so that the discussion is about flight, then the answer is that the plane will take off. Arguing about when the wheel bearings on the plane or in the conveyor belt will burst into flames or disintegrate is missing the point ot the original version of the question.
Better versions of the question ask something like, "A plane on a conveyor belt tries to take off. The conveyor belt attempts to stop it by matching the plane's speed in reverse. Will the plane take off?"
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
Thank you for that ! - Was about to make references to the Book of Proverbs... which may have added fuel to the fire .
Better versions of the question ask something like, "A plane on a conveyor belt tries to take off. The conveyor belt attempts to stop it by matching the plane's speed in reverse. Will the plane take off?"
Near enough to the "original" and Sensible, version I first came across last Century. Same answer, then as now.
- Yes.
Edit:- but landing on melted wheel bearings promises to be...'Spectacular'
As worded, it is a very interesting question though.
Cheers
Slunnie
~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~
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