1. Did flight have any influence outside of aviation? If so,
how?
Yes! Flight
had numerous influences outside of aviation. When the first men design
heavier-than-air flight, it was impossible for that concept not to leak into
entertainment in our society. It started with the poets and artists of the
decade, such as Pablo Picasso, Franz Kafka, and Filippo Tommaso Marinetti.
Marinetti even started a new movement known as Futurism, which was of course
focused around the invention of the airplane. This knew artistic movement
challenged artists to think ahead and imagine a world with advanced technology
(pg. 122). Other literature, such as Bill Bruce aviation novels, was also
influenced. And not unlike today where music is influenced by social media
trends, music back then was heavily influenced by aviation. They had hits such
as, “Come Josephine in My Flying Machine” and “My Little Loving Aero Man” (pg.
123). Aside from all of the aviation in the arts, there were several house hold
items and toys based around airplanes that began immerging. Planes were stamped
onto everything and “for a time it seemed that images of aviators and airplanes
could be used to sell anything” (pg. 123). Nowadays, aviation does not seem to
be a big selling tool. However, the early 1900’s was the age of aviation and
companies used that to their advantage.
2. How did this new field of aviation affect science?
Before the
first plane, there was already a basic understanding of aerodynamics among the
science world. Scientists, physicists, mathematicians we able to look at
gliders and derive information from those aircrafts to lay a foundation for
aerodynamics. John William Strutt was able to advance the knowledge during this
time when he looked at a cylinder. When Strutt put the cylinder in a “fluid
stream experience,” he was able to create a lift when the cylinder turned
clockwise. Using this cylinder model and aviators gliding experiments, Whilhelm
Kutta set the basis for how to calculate the life mathematically (pg. 125). That
still begs the question how the lift was generated. Frederick Lanchester Ludwig
Prandtl both contributed greatly to this study of aerodynamics during this
time. Lanchester wrote Aerial Flight
to communicate his ideas about flight, while Prandtl studied fluid dynamics.
Prandtl revealed a concept known as the boundary layer. “This notion served as
the cornerstone of a circulation theory of lift presented in elegant mathematical
form” (pg. 125). Because of his theories, Prandtl became the world leader of
aerodynamics and changed the ways of engineers from that moment on.
7. What was the cult of the heroic airman?
World War I
was the first air war, so there was something to be said for the men who would
take these flying machines to the skies to fight for their country. Unlike the
soldiers in the trenches, people saw these aviators as majestic beasts flying
through the sky and taking the war by storm. Starting with the French, people
were honoring these men and looked up to them as someone who would put forth
their own skills to defend their land, no matter what the cost. Stories were
exaggerated and even fibbed about, but it did not matter because these men deserved
to be honored (pg. 156). People compared the men who fought in the trenches to
the men who fought in the air and tended to look at the aviators as the heroes
of the two. That is not to say that they did not honor the men who fought in
the trenches, but when you think about aviators dying in the war, it seems more
catastrophic. Not only are you losing an aviator, but you are losing a flying
machine as well. Aviators put their lives onto the wings of these airplanes and
must rely on their skills and the plane’s design to survive and defend. When
you think of it in those terms, it makes sense that people would think of
aviators as the heroes.
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