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=== How lift is generated when the airplane is upside down? ===
 
=== How lift is generated when the airplane is upside down? ===
 
In most airplanes that are capable of flying inverted, the airfoil would be a symmetrical airfoil that is capable of producing lift in that position. So in an inverted airplane with a symmetrical airfoil, when the pilot pushes the control stick the angle of attack would decrease and produce a negative lift relative to the normal orientation of the plane, but in reality, it would be creating a positive lift as it is flying inverted.
 
In most airplanes that are capable of flying inverted, the airfoil would be a symmetrical airfoil that is capable of producing lift in that position. So in an inverted airplane with a symmetrical airfoil, when the pilot pushes the control stick the angle of attack would decrease and produce a negative lift relative to the normal orientation of the plane, but in reality, it would be creating a positive lift as it is flying inverted.
 
=== What causes the upwash in the leading edge of the airfoil? ===
 
When the free stream air encounters the wing, the air flow slows down due to the obstruction of the wing. Thus the airflow is brought '''almost to rest''' near an arbitrary point at the leading edge of the wing (a point for 2-dimensional airfoil, a line for a 3-dimensional wing). This point is technically called as the [[stagnation point]]. Now the airflow that approaches this point would either go upwards or downwards. Why? Because of the fact that the air stream just above the skin of the wing on the upper surface has a very low pressure compared to that of the air streams above it that gradually reaches atmoshperic pressure. So these high velocity air molecules near the skin sort of creates low-pressure 'sink' for the high-pressure air upstream (the air around the stagnation region). This accelerates the streamline towards the trailing edge. Back at the stagnation region, the rest of the upstream air, due to the dynamic equilibrium, air flows below the wings.
 
 
=== What causes the downwash in the trailing edge of the airfoil? ===
 
The low-pressure air accelerated through out the contour of the upper surface of the airfoil, due to [[inertia]], tends to follow the contour unless acted on by other forces. When the contour ends at the trailing edge, the air gets mixed up by the high pressure air from the bottom surface and the air stream at atmospheric pressure above it, everything tends to attain an equilibrium. The net effect of this equilibrium is that the total momentum of all the air molecules goes downward (and sideways for a 3D wing) due to the pressure difference in the upper and lower regions.
 
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
<references/>
 
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