So the answer to the question is that it is unanswerable. The only way to answer it is to make assumptions. Assume the wheels are ideal (frictionless) and the conveyor is powerless to prevent the airplane from taking off. Assume the wheels are not ideal but the conveyor is idea then the conveyor is able to prevent the airplane from even moving. Assume anything is real-world and you need data on the whole system in order to make a judgement. It hinges on its assumptions, which makes for a very poorly stated probem. Devise such an experiment in the real world and what would likely happen is this:
The company that insures the 747 calls up and says they'll cancel your policy if you try the experiment. The company that financed the 747 will call soon after saying their lein on the airframe prevents you from operating it without insurance. So the whole thing ends before it begins. In other words, it's LIABILITY and not PHYSICS that prevents the plane from taking off. :)
But assuming you own the plane outright I'm sure the FAA would step in before you have a chance to give it a go. So it's REGULATION and not PHYSICS that prevents the plane from taking off.
Assuming you've managed to bribe the FAA in to letting you give it a try, you line the plane up on your conveyor, advance the throttles, and the conveyor lunges to life, speeding along to try to keep your plane motionless. Then the tires fail at speeds beyond their rating. The bare wheels now dig in to the fast moving conveyor and rip the gear clean off. The airplane collapses on to the fast moving conveyor and is quickly accelerated backwards. The engines dig in as well and blow apart. Now the entire mess, aluminum, carbon fiber, flaming jet fuel, gets chucked at high speed off the back of the conveyor and does, briefly and for a very short distance, take flight.
So yes, the plane will fly.
Who says you HAVE to do an experiment with a REAL 747? You could easily test the theory on a much, much smaller scale. Couldn't someone test the theory with RC planes?
that counteracts the movement of the aircrafts wheels as they move.
Ok, I am taking one last stab at this.
Without the rolling motion of the wheels the aircraft cannot gain speed to take off, unless it is on skids and snow or floats and water or the conveyor is traveling with the aircraft, which it is not, it is against it and counteracting it.
Put you aircraft on the conveyor with the engines turned off. Turn on the conveyor. The aircraft travels backwards on the conveyor just like your suitcase in the baggage hall. Now start the engines and increase the thrust to stop the backward motion of the aircraft. It is now sitting on the conveyor belt and staying in one position thanks to the rolling effect of the wheels.
Now if we increase the thrust and at the same time the conveyor belt speed so we always have this equilibrium (stated the conveyor counteracts the thrust) up to the max thrust of the aircraft, will the aircraft will remain in the same position? and if it does, it will have no forward motion to produce lift.
Put you aircraft on the conveyor with the engines turned off. Turn on the conveyor. The aircraft travels backwards on the conveyor just like your suitcase in the baggage hall...
So... what 'problems' could we have with the conveyor that would allow an 'ideal' aircraft to take-off?
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