Passive voice
Hello today I want to review
an article passive voice so I will search a passive voice sentences in the
text. This article is from https://www.popsci.com/how-do-planes-fly.
So Let’s check it out
How
do planes fly?
A simple answer you
can explain to your friends.
It's pretty straightforward, really.
Victor Forgacs via Unsplash
In 1903, Orville and Wilbur Wright flew
the first plane in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Their plane looked quite different than the ones you
fly today. It was
made of wood and cloth, and there were no seats inside a cabin—the
pilot, who was the only person on the plane, had to lie flat on the wing,
completely out in the open! Luckily, that plane didn’t fly very high or far. Today, most planes are made out of
metal, and passengers
sit safely inside an enclosed cabin. Planes usually fly about seven miles high in the sky,
and the biggest ones can reach
halfway around the world! But despite the differences between the first
plane and today’s modern ones, they
both use the same science to fly. Here’s how they work.
Flight
relies on two principles of aerodynamics,
or the study of how air moves around objects: thrust and lift.
Thrust
is when an object is pushed forward with force.
Planes use their jet engines
to achieve thrust: the
engines suck in air, compress it, mix it with gas, and ignite the mixture it in
a burst of energy that shoots out the back of the engine, which pushes the
plane forward. Jet
engines produce
so much thrust that planes can fly at extremely fast speeds of up to 600 miles
per hour (mph)! That’s a lot faster than cars, which drive anywhere from
55 to 75 mph on highways.
Lift
is the force that drives a plane upward and keeps it in the air. In order to produce lift, planes rely on their wings, which have a special shape called an airfoil. The top of the wing bulges out to create
a smooth bump. When the
wing moves through air, incoming
air particles either go above or below it. Thanks to the bump, the air on top of the wing moves
faster than the air on the bottom of the wing. These particle speeds create lower air pressure above
the wing and higher air pressure underneath it—this concept is called Bernoulli's Principle.
The high air pressure pushes
the wing up, creating lift.
Thrust and lift are always fighting
two other principles of aerodynamics: drag and gravity.
Drag
is when a moving object blocks the flow of air,
slowing the object down. You
can feel drag if you
put your hand out the window of a moving car—your arms get pushed backwards as the air rushes by.
Planes needs to have enough
thrust to overcome the amount of drag it produces, so they’re designed to have air
flow as smoothly as possible around the body (this is called being aerodynamic).
Gravity
is the force that pulls all objects down toward the earth. Lift can
overcome gravity if it is strong enough—the engineers who build planes do a series of equations to
find the perfect wing size and flying speed to create the right amount of lift,
based on the weight of the plane.
These combating forces mean planes have to fly at high speeds in
order to stay in the air, which is just as well. When was the last time
you wished a flight would last a little longer?
Active voice
Passive voice
· this concept is called Bernoulli's
Principle
· they’re designed to have air flow as
smoothly as possible around the body.
· this is called being aerodynamic.
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