Every aircraft flying today makes a silent compromise. Its wings were shaped for one moment in a journey that lasts hours and from that moment forward, through every change in altitude, speed, and weight, the wing stays fixed. Rigid. Slightly wrong for almost every minute of every flight.
Birds solved this problem a hundred million years ago. Engineers have been trying to catch up ever since.
Morphing Aircraft tells the story of that pursuit from the Wright brothers' wing-warping Flyer to the smart materials, compliant structures, and real-time control systems being developed today. It explains the physics of why shape matters, the century of failed attempts to change it in flight, and how advances in materials science, computational design, and manufacturing are finally making adaptive wings a realistic prospect rather than a persistent dream.
Honest about what works, candid about what doesn't, and clear-eyed about the gap between laboratory demonstration and certified commercial aircraft, this is the complete account of one of aerospace engineering's most compelling unsolved problems and how close we are to solving it.
The wing is learning to move. This book explains how.
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Transportation