The evolution of airplanes


Autoria(s): Bejan, A; Charles, JD; Lorente, S
Data(s)

28/07/2014

Identificador

Journal of Applied Physics, 2014, 116 (4)

0021-8979

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8957

1089-7550

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8957

Relação

Journal of Applied Physics

10.1063/1.4886855

Tipo

Journal Article

Resumo

The prevailing view is that we cannot witness biological evolution because it occurred on a time scale immensely greater than our lifetime. Here, we show that we can witness evolution in our lifetime by watching the evolution of the flying human-and-machine species: the airplane. We document this evolution, and we also predict it based on a physics principle: the constructal law. We show that the airplanes must obey theoretical allometric rules that unite them with the birds and other animals. For example, the larger airplanes are faster, more efficient as vehicles, and have greater range. The engine mass is proportional to the body size: this scaling is analogous to animal design, where the mass of the motive organs (muscle, heart, lung) is proportional to the body size. Large or small, airplanes exhibit a proportionality between wing span and fuselage length, and between fuel load and body size. The animal-design counterparts of these features are evident. The view that emerges is that the evolution phenomenon is broader than biological evolution. The evolution of technology, river basins, and animal design is one phenomenon, and it belongs in physics. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC.