Page:Aerial Flight - Volume 1 - Aerodynamics - Frederick Lanchester - 1906.djvu/63

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FLUID RESISTANCE.
§ 30

counterwake will have a lateral component (downwards in the figure), and, on the principle of the continuous communication of momentum, there will be a reaction on the ball in the opposite direction, that is to say upwards.
Fig. 22.
A ball may therefore be sustained against gravity or be made to "soar" by receiving a spin in the direction shown, or, if the spin be about a vertical axis, the path of the ball will be a curve (in plan), such that the aerodynamic reaction will be balanced by centrifugal force.

The actual means by which the reaction acting on the ball comes about may be understood from either of two points of view.
Fig. 23.
We may (Fig. 22) regard this reaction as the centrifugal effect of the air passing over the ball preponderating greatly over that of the fluid passing underneath, or if we anticipate a knowledge of hydrodynamic theory (Chap. III.), we know that the greater proximity of the lines of flow in the former region is alone sufficient to indicate diminished pressure. The lines as drawn in the figure are not plottings—there is no way known of plotting a field of flow of this degree of complexity—but they may be taken as a very fair representation of what the plotting would be if it could be effected.

The reason that the streamlines have been shown rising to meet the ball in its progress will be better understood in the light of Chaps. III. and IV. This detail is related to

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