Naval aviation 100 years from kitty hawk.The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw a flurry of inventors striving to find a way to enable man to take to the skies. While some successfully flew gliders both in the U.S. and abroad, the inexorable draw was toward powered flight. The Wright Flyer The Wright Flyer (often retrospectively referred to as Flyer I and occasionally Kitty Hawk) was the first powered aircraft designed and built by the Wright brothers. built by Orville and Wilbur Wright was the first to achieve what had previously been only dreamed about or sketched on paper: a successful flight of a heavier-than-air craft Noun 1. heavier-than-air craft - a non-buoyant aircraft that requires a source of power to hold it aloft and to propel it aircraft - a vehicle that can fly powered by an internal combustion engine Internal combustion engine A prime mover, the fuel for which is burned within the engine, as contrasted to a steam engine, for example, in which fuel is burned in a separate furnace. . The milestone flight on 17 December 1903 marked the inception of the modern aviation age and began a revolution in civilian and military transportation. The Navy's interest in flight had already been piqued prior to the Wright brothers' historic achievement, in 1898, Navy officers were assigned to sit on an interservice board to investigate the military possibilities of Professor Samuel P. Langley's flying machine. Almost immediately after the 1903 flight, civilian inventors began to apply the lessons learned by the Wright brothers to their own designs, and in 1908 naval observers began attending flight demonstrations to observe the progress of the new technology. In late 1910 the first naval officer NAVAL OFFICER. The name of an officer of the United States, whose duties are prescribed by various acts of congress. 2. Naval officers are appointed for the term of four years, but are removable from office at pleasure. Act of May 15, 1820, Sec. 1, 3 Story, L. was ordered to flight training, and the Navy purchased its first aircraft in 1911. Soon. Naval Aviation Naval aviation is the application of manned military air power by navies. Maritime aviation is the operation of aircraft in a maritime role under the command of land based forces such as RAF Coastal Command or United States Coast Guard. had developed into a formidable fighting force Fighting Force is a 1997 3D beat 'em up developed by Core Design and published by Eidos in the same lines of classics such as Streets of Rage and Double Dragon. utilizing the technology that had been so new just a few short years before. From its earliest days. Naval Aviation has played a role in countless technological innovations. While many of these focused solely on improving aviation's warfighting capability, others had broader applications outside the military arena. The following photo essay highlights a few of Naval Aviation's advancements in science and exploration; radar, navigation and communications; aviation technology; and lifesaving techniques and equipment that have benefited the civilian world during the first 100 years of modern flight. |
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