التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

أريد حل ص31 ضروي الكتاب الملون للصف العاشر

لو سمحتو أريد حل ص31 ضروي الكتاب الملون

باجر أريده

بليييييييز

حتى أنا أبى هذي الأجوبه اليوم …

بتكسبون أجر إن شاء الله .

حتى انااااااااا

السموحه مدرستنا لغو هاذي الوحده

بعدنا ما خذناها

السموحة

سبحــــــــــــــــــــان الله و بحمده

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

تقارير جاهزة للانجليزي للصف العاشر

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته

تقاريــــــــر E جاهــــــــــــزة

التحميل في المرفقات

الملفات المرفقة

مشكورة الغالية

… مشكوره على التقرير الرائع …

مشكووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووو ووووووووووووووووووووووووره …~~

شكرررررررررررررررررررررررررررررا فكيتيناااااااااااااا من صدعت أبلة الانجليزي

مشكووووووووووووره

لك جزيل الشكر اختي ( MOON SHINE )~

و في ميزان حسناتج الغالــيه ..!

مشكورة خيتو ويزاج الله 1000 خير

مشكووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووو ووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووووور

يسلمووو الغلاا..^^

اللعم اعز الاسلام و المسلمين

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

تقرير , بحث عن King Lear كينك لير الامارات للصف العاشر

ساعدوني أريد بحث عن مسرحية King Lear لويايم شكسبير

King Lear

King Lear is a tragedy by William Shakespeare, considered one of his greatest works, and is ****d on the legend of King Leir of Britain. The part of Lear has been played by many great actors.

There are two distinct versions of the play: The True Chronicle of the History of the Life and Death of King Lear and His Three Daughters, which appeared in quarto in 1608, and The Tragedy of King Lear, which appeared in the First Folio in 1623, a more theatrical version. The two texts are commonly printed in a conflated version, although many modern editors have argued that each version has its individual integrity.

After the Restoration the play was often modified by theatre practitioners who disliked its nihilistic flavour, but since World War II it has come to be regarded as one of Shakespeare’s supreme achievements. The tragedy is particularly noted for its probing observations on the nature of human suffering and kinship on a cosmic scale.

Sources
Cordelia’s Portion by Ford Madox Brown
Cordelia’s Portion by Ford Madox Brown

Shakespeare’s play is ****d on various accounts of the semi-legendary Leir. Shakespeare’s most important source is thought to be the second edition of The Chronicles of England, Scotlande, and Irelande by Raphael Holinshed, published in 1587. Holinshed himself found the story in the earlier Historia Regum Britanniae by Geoffrey of Monmouth, which was written in the 12th century. The name of Cordelia was probably taken from Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene, published in 1590. Spenser’s Cordelia also dies from hanging, as in King Lear.

Other possible sources are A Mirror for Magistrates (1574), by John Higgins; The Mal******* (1604), by John Marston; The London Prodigal (1605); Arcadia (1580-1590), by Sir Philip Sidney, from which Shakespeare took the main outline of the Gloucester subplot; Montaigne’s Essays, which were translated into English by John Florio in 1603; An Historical Description of Iland of Britaine, by William Harrison; Remaines Concerning Britaine, by William Camden (1606); Albion’s England, by William Warner, (1589); and A Declaration of egregious Popish Impostures, by Samuel Harsnett (1603), which provided some of the language used by Edgar while he feigns madness. King Lear is also a literary variant of a common fairy tale, where a father rejects his youngest daughter on the basis of a statement of her love that does not please him.[1]

The source of the subplot involving Gloucester, Edgar and Edmund is a tale in Philip Sidney’s Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia, with a blind Paphlagonian king and his two sons, Leonatus and Plexitrus.[2]

Date and text
Although a precise date of composition cannot be given, many editors of the play date King Lear between 1603 and 1606. The latest it could have been written is 1606, because the Stationers’ Register notes a performance on December 26, 1606. The 1603 date originates from words in Edgar’s speeches which may derive from Samuel Harsnett’s Declaration of Egregious Popish Impostures (1603).[3] In his Arden edition, R.A. Foakes argues for a date of 1605-6, because one of Shakespeare’s sources, The True Chronicle History of King Leir, was not published until 1605; close correspondences between that play and Shakespeare’s suggest that he may have been working from a text (rather than from recollections of a performance).[4] On the contrary, Frank Kermode, in the Riverside Shakespeare, considers the publication of Leir to have been a response to performances of Shakespeare’s already-written play; noting a sonnet by William Strachey that may have verbal resemblances with Lear, Kermode concludes that "1604-5 seems the best compromise".[5]

However, before Kenneth Muir set out the case for the play’s indebtedness to Harsnett’s 1603 text, a minority of scholars believed the play to be much older. In 1936, A.S. Cairncross argued that "the relationship of the two plays [Leir and Lear] has been inverted": Shakespeare’s Lear came first and that the anonymous Leir is an imitation of it.[6] One piece of evidence for this view is that in 1594, King Leir was entered into the Stationers’ Register (but never published), while in the same year a play called King Leare was recorded by Philip Henslowe as being performed at the Rose theatre.[7] However, the majority view is that these two references are simply variant spellings of the same play, King Leir.[8] In addition, Eva Turner Clark, an Oxfordian denier of Shakespeare’s authorship saw numerous parallels between the play and the events of 1589-90, including the Kent banishment subplot, which she believed to parallel the 1589 banishment of Sir Francis Drake by Queen Elizabeth.
The question of dating is further complicated by the question of revision (see below).

The modern text of King Lear derives from three sources: two quartos, published in 1608 (Q1) and 1619 (Q2) [10] respectively, and the version in the First Folio of 1623 (F1). The differences between these versions are significant. Q1 contains 285 lines not in F1; F1 contains around 100 lines not in Q1. Also, at least a thousand individual words are changed between the two texts, each text has a completely different style of punctuation, and about half the verse lines in the F1 are either printed as prose or differently divided in the Q1. The early editors, beginning with Alexander Pope, simply conflated the two texts, creating the modern version that has remained nearly universal for centuries. The conflated version is born from the presumption that Shakespeare wrote only one original manuscript, now unfortunately lost, and that the Quarto and Folio versions are distortions of that original.

As early as 1931, Madeleine Doran suggested that the two texts had basically different provenances, and that these differences between them were critically interesting. This argument, however, was not widely discussed until the late 1970s, when it was revived, principally by Michael Warren and Gary Taylor. Their thesis, while controversial, has gained significant acceptance. It posits, essentially, that the Quarto derives from something close to Shakespeare’s foul papers, and the Folio is drawn in some way from a promptbook, prepared for production by Shakespeare’s company or someone else. In short, Q1 is "authorial"; F1 is "theatrical." In criticism, the rise of "revision criticism" has been part of the pronounced trend away from mid-century formalism. The New Cambridge Shakespeare has published separate editions of Q and F; the most recent Pelican Shakespeare edition contains both the 1608 Quarto and the 1623 Folio text as well as a conflated version; the New Arden edition edited by R.A. Foakes is not the only recent edition to offer the traditional conflated text.

Performance history
The first recorded performance on December 26, 1606 is the only one known with certainty from Shakespeare’s era. The play was revived soon after the theatres re-opened at the start of the Restoration era, and was played in its original form as late as 1675. But the urge to adapt and change that was so liberally applied to Shakespeare’s plays in that period eventually settled on Lear as on other works. Nahum Tate produced his famous — or infamous — adaptation in 1681: he gave the play a happy ending, with Edgar and Cordelia marrying, and Lear restored to kingship. This was the version acted by Thomas Betterton, David Garrick, and Edmund Kean, and praised by Samuel Johnson. The play was suppressed in the late 18th and early 19th century by the British government, which disliked the dramatization of a mad monarch at a time when George III was insane[11]. The original text did not return to the stage till William Charles Macready’s production of 1838.[12] Other actors who were famous as King Lear in the nineteenth century were Samuel Phelps and Edwin Booth.

The play is among the most popular of Shakespeare’s works to be staged in the twentieth century. The most famous staging may be Paul Scofield’s 1962 performance as Lear, directed by Peter Brook; it was voted as the greatest performance in a Shakespearean play in the history of the RSC in a 2022 opinion poll of members of the Royal Shakespeare Company, and immortalized on film in 1971. The longest Broadway run of King Lear was the 1968 production starring Lee J. Cobb as Lear, with Stacy Keach as Edmund, Philip Bosco as Kent, and René Auberjonois as the Fool. It ran for 72 performances: no other Broadway production of the play has run for as many as 50 performances. A Soviet film adaptation was done by Mosfilm in 1971, directed by Grigori Kozintsev, with black-and-white photography and a score by Shostakovich. The script is ****d on a translation by Boris Pasternak, and Estonian actor Jüri Järvet plays the mad king.

Other famous actors to play King Lear in the twentieth century are:

* William Devlin, who starred in a drastically shortened live television version in 1948, directed by Royston Morley.
* Orson Welles, who starred in another live television version (now preserved on kinescope) in 1953 for CBS. This one severely condensed the play to ninety minutes, and eliminated the Edgar-Edmund subplot.
* Laurence Olivier, who decided to tackle the role for the second time at the age of 75 in a television production in 1982 with an all-star cast that included Diana Rigg, John Hurt, and Colin Blakely. Olivier had played Lear previously in 1946, at the age of thirty-nine at the Old Vic, but without much success. His 1982 Lear was telecast in the United States in 1984 as a two hour and forty minute production, which was widely acclaimed; Olivier received the last of his several Emmy Awards as Best Actor for his performance.
* John Gielgud was 26 when he first played Lear at the Old Vic Theatre in 1931, and played the part in three additional stage productions. He was 90 when he took on the part for the final time in a 1994 radio production with a cast that included Judi Dench, Kenneth Branagh, and Derek Jacobi.
* Orson Welles again played Lear at the New York Civic Center in 1958, breaking his ankle during the run and playing most of the performances in a wheelchair.
* Donald Wolfit was considered one of the great Lears, keeping the role in his repertory for over ten years and playing it on Broadway and for the Royal Shakespeare Company.
* Ian Holm won a Laurence Olivier Award for his performance of Lear at the Royal National Theatre and an Emmy nomination for the 1997 television version. Minimalist sets put the focus on the acting.
* James Earl Jones played Lear in the New York Shakespeare Festival, with Raul Julia as Edmund, Paul Sorvino as Gloucester, and Rene Auberjonois as Edgar. This production was videotaped and telecast in 1974 by PBS.
* Michael Hordern, who played Lear in a 1982 PBS telecast shown as part of the BBC Television Shakespeare series.

The first great 21st century Lear may be Christopher Plummer, who became the first actor to receive a Tony Award nomination for playing King Lear in the 2022 Broadway production at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre.

Other recent Lears were Stacy Keach in a production at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, and Kevin Kline in a critically reviled production at the New York Shakespeare Festival.

Ian McKellen (who had performed the play twice before in the roles of Edgar and the Earl of Kent, winning a Drama Desk Award for the former) was also triumphant as King Lear after opening in the play at the Courtyard Theatre at Stratford-Upon-Avon for the Royal Shakespeare Company in April of 2022 before taking the production on a world tour with a cast that included Romola Garai as Cordelia, Sylvester McCoy as the Fool, Frances Barber as Goneril, Monica Dolan as Regan, William Gaunt as the Earl of Gloucester and Jonathan Hyde as the Earl of Kent. It then took up residence at the New London Theatre, Drury Lane, where it ended its run on 12th January 2022. The play was directed by Trevor Nunn and was being played alternatively with The Seagull.

Characters
* King Lear is ruler of Britain. He is a patriarchal figure whose misjudgment of his daughters brings about his downfall.
* Goneril (sometimes written Gonerill) is Lear’s treacherous eldest daughter and wife to the Duke of Albany.
* Regan is Lear’s treacherous second daughter, and wife to the Duke of Cornwall.
* Cordelia (poss. "heart of a lion" [13]) is Lear’s youngest daughter. At the beginning of the play, she has yet to marry and has two suitors: the Duke of Burgundy and the King of France.
* The Duke of Albany[14] is Goneril’s husband. Goneril scorns him for his "milky gentleness". He turns against his wife later in the play.
* The Duke of Cornwall[14] is Regan’s husband. He has the Earl of Kent put in the stocks, leaves Lear out on the heath during a storm, and gouges out Gloucester’s eyes. After his attack on Gloucester, one of his servants attacks and mortally wounds him.
* The Earl of Gloucester[14] is Edgar’s father, and the father of the illegitimate son, Edmund. Edmund deceives him against Edgar, and Edgar flees, taking on the disguise of Tom O’Bedlam.
* The Earl of Kent[14] is always faithful to Lear, but he is banished by the king after he protests against Lear’s treatment of Cordelia. He takes on a disguise (Caius) and serves the king without letting him know his true identity.
* Edmund (sometimes written Edmond) is Gloucester’s illegitimate son. He works with Goneril and Regan to further his ambitions, and the three of them form a romantic triangle.
* Edgar is the legitimate son of the Earl of Gloucester. Disguised as Tom O’Bedlam, he helps his blind father. At the end of the play he assumes rule of the kingdom and the ‘Divine Right of Kings’ is restored.
* Oswald is Goneril’s servant, and is described as "a serviceable villain". He tries to murder Gloucester, but instead he is killed by Edgar.
* The Fool is a jester who is devoted to Lear and Cordelia, although his relationships with both are quite complex. Although he misses Cordelia when she is gone, we never see the two together. He has a privileged relationship with Lear; no one else would get away with taunting him the way the Fool does, through riddles and insults. When Lear begins to consider the feelings of others and the effects of his actions, he first thinks to help the Fool.

Synopsis
The play begins with King Lear taking the decision to abdicate the throne and divide his kingdom among his three daughters: Goneril, Regan and Cordelia. The eldest two are already married, while Cordelia is much sought after as a bride, partly because she is her father’s favourite. In a fit of senile vanity, he suggests a contest — each daughter shall be accorded lands according to how much she demonstrates her love for him in speech. But the plan misfires. Cordelia refuses to outdo the flattery of her elder sisters, as she feels it would only cheapen her true feelings to flatter him purely for profit. Lear, in a fit of pique, divides her share of the kingdom between Goneril and Regan, and Cordelia is banished. The King of France however marries her, even after she has been disinherited, since he sees value in her honesty, or perhaps a casus belli to subsequently invade England.

Soon after Lear abdicates the throne, he finds that Goneril and Regan’s feelings for him have turned cold, and arguments ensue. The Earl of Kent, who has spoken up for Cordelia and been banished for his pains, returns disguised as the servant Caius, who will "eat no fish" (that is to say, he is a Protestant), in order to protect the king, to whom he remains loyal. Meanwhile, Goneril and Regan fall out with one another over their attraction to Edmund, the bastard son of the Earl of Gloucester — and are forced to deal with an army from France, led by Cordelia, sent to restore Lear to his throne. A cataclysmic war is fought.

The subplot involves the Earl of Gloucester and his two sons, Edgar and Edmund. Edmund concocts false stories about his legitimate half-brother, and Edgar is forced into exile, affecting lunacy. Edmund engages in liaisons with Goneril and Regan. Gloucester is confronted by Regan’s husband, the Duke of Cornwall, but is saved from death by several of Cornwall’s servants, who object to the duke’s treatment of Lear; one of the servants wounds the duke (but is killed by Regan), who throws Gloucester into the storm in order for him to, "smell his way to Dover" after plucking out his eyes. Cornwall dies of his wound shortly thereafter.

Edgar, still under the guise of a homeless lunatic, finds Gloucester out in the storm. The earl asks him whether he knows the way to Dover, to which Edgar replies that he will lead him. Edgar, whose voice Gloucester fails to recognise, is shaken by encountering his blinded father and his guise is put to the test.

للمزيد
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Lear

http://www.pathguy.com/kinglear.htm

<< تم تعديل عنوان الموضوع

شكراً على الموضوع…

تسلم أخوي....ما شاء الله عليك .>>.دوم فالخدمه…

مشكووووووووووووووووور وما تفصر

جزـآآك الله خيرـآآ امير

أستــــغفر الله العظيم

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

تقرير عن helicopter للصف العاشر

السلام عليكم خواني لو سمحتم اريد تقرير helicopter
اريد ضروري دخيلكم لاتنسوني وشكرا

عنبوه وينكم 7 دخلو ولا سو شي اريده ضروري

انا بعد ابغية

Helicopter

A helicopter is an aircraft that is lifted and propelled by one or more horizontal rotors, each rotor consisting of two or more rotor blades. Helicopters are classified as rotorcraft or rotary-wing aircraft to distinguish them from fixed-wing aircraft because the helicopter achieves lift with the rotor blades which rotate around a mast. The word ‘helicopter’ is adapted from the French hélicoptère, coined by Gustave de Ponton d’Amecourt in 1861, which originates from the Greek helix/helik- (ἕλικ-) = "spiral" or "turning" and pteron (πτερόν) = "wing".[1][2]
The primary advantage of a helicopter is from the rotor which provides lift without the aircraft needing to move forward, allowing the helicopter to take off and land vertically without a runway. For this reason, helicopters are often used in congested or isolated areas where fixed-wing aircraft cannot take off or land. The lift from the rotor also allows the helicopter to hover in one area more efficiently than other forms of vertical takeoff and landing aircraft, allowing it to accomplish tasks that fixed-wing aircraft cannot perform.
Although helicopters were developed and built during the first half-century of flight, some even reaching limited production, it was not until 1942 that a helicopter designed by Igor Sikorsky reached full-scale production,[3] with 131 aircraft built.[4] Even though most previous designs used more than one main rotor, it was the single main rotor with antitorque tail rotor configuration of this design that would come to be recognized worldwide as the helicopter

History

The earliest references for vertical flight have come from China. Since 400 BC,[5] Chinese children have played with bamboo flying toys[6][7] and a book written in 4th-century China, referred to as Pao Phu Tau (also Pao Phu Tzu or Bao Pu Zi, 抱朴子), is reported to describe some of the ideas inherent to rotary wing aircraft:[8]
“ Someone asked the master about the principles of mounting to dangerous heights and traveling into the vast inane. The Master said, "Some have made flying cars with wood from the inner part of the jujube tree, using ox-leather [straps] fastened to returning blades so as to set the machine in motion."[9] ”

da Vinci’s "aerial screw"
It was not until the early 1480s, when Leonardo da Vinci created a design for a machine that could be described as an "aerial screw", that any recorded advancement was made towards vertical flight. His notes suggested that he built small flying models, but there were no indications for any provision to stop the rotor from making the whole craft rotate.[10][11] As scientific knowledge increased and became more accepted, men continued to pursue the idea of vertical flight. Many of these later models and machines would more closely resemble the ancient bamboo flying top with spinning wings, rather than Da Vinci’s screw.
In July 1754, Mikhail Lomonosov demonstrated a small coaxial rotor to the Russian Academy of Sciences. It was powered by a spring and suggested as a method to lift meteorological instruments. In 1783, Christian de Launoy, and his mechanic, Bienvenu, made a model with a pair of counter-rotating rotors, using turkey’s flight feathers as rotor blades, and in 1784, demonstrated it to the French Academy of Sciences. Sir George Cayley, influenced by a childhood fascination with the Chinese flying top, grew up to develop a model of feathers, similar to Launoy and Bienvenu, but powered by rubber bands. By the end of the century, he had progressed to using sheets of tin for rotor blades and springs for power. His writings on his experiments and models would become influential on future aviation pioneers.[10] Alphonse Pénaud would later develop coaxial rotor model helicopter toys in 1870, also powered by rubber bands. One of these toys, given as a gift by their father, would inspire the Wright brothers to pursue the dream of flight.[12]
In 1861, the word "helicopter" was coined by Gustave de Ponton d’Amécourt, a French inventor who demonstrated a small, steam-powered model. While celebrated as an innovative use of a new ****l, aluminum, the model never lifted off the ground. D’Amecourt’s linguistic contribution would survive to eventually describe the vertical flight he had envisioned. Steam power was popular with other inventors as well. Enrico Forlanini’s unmanned helicopter was also powered by a steam engine. It was the first of its type that rose to a height of 13 meters (43 ft), where it remained for some 20 seconds after a vertical take-off from a park in Milan, in 1877. Emmanuel Dieuaide’s steam-powered design featured counter-rotating rotors powered through a hose from a boiler on the ground. Dandrieux’s design had counter-rotating rotors and a 7.7-pound (3.5-kilogram) steam engine. It rose more than 40 feet (12 m) and flew for 20 seconds circa 1878.[10]
In 1885, Thomas Edison was given US$1,000 by James Gordon Bennett, Jr., to conduct experiments towards developing flight. Edison built a helicopter and used the paper for a stock ticker to create guncotton, with which he attempted to power an internal combustion engine. The helicopter was damaged by explosions and one of his workers was badly burned. Edison reported that it would take a motor with a ratio of three to four pounds per horsepower produced to be successful, based on his experiments.[13] Ján Bahýľ, a Slovak inventor, adapted the internal combustion engine to power his helicopter model that reached a height of 0.5 meters (1.6 ft) in 1901. On 5 May 1905, his helicopter reached four meters (13 ft) in altitude and flew for over 1,500 meters (4,900 ft).[14] In 1908, Edison patented his own design for a helicopter powered by a gasoline engine with box kites attached to a mast by cables for a rotor, but it never flew.[15]
First flights
In 1906, two French brothers, Jacques and Louis Breguet, began experimenting with airfoils for helicopters and in 1907, those experiments resulted in the Gyroplane No.1. Although there is some uncertainty about the dates, sometime between 14 August and 29 September 1907, the Gyroplane No. 1 lifted its pilot up into the air about two feet (0.6 m) for a minute.[3] However, the Gyroplane No. 1 proved to be extremely unsteady and required a man at each corner of the airframe to hold it steady. For this reason, the flights of the Gyroplane No. 1 are considered to be the first manned flight of a helicopter, but not a free or untethered flight.

Paul Cornu’s helicopter in 1907
That same year, fellow French inventor Paul Cornu designed and built a Cornu helicopter that used two 20-foot (6 m) counter-rotating rotors driven by a 24-hp (18-kW) Antoinette engine. On 13 November 1907, it lifted its inventor to 1 foot (0.3 m) and remained aloft for 20 seconds. Even though this flight did not surpass the flight of the Gyroplane No. 1, it was reported to be the first truly free flight with a pilot.[n 1] Cornu’s helicopter would complete a few more flights and achieve a height of nearly 6.5 feet (2 m), but it proved to be unstable and was abandoned.[3]
Early development
In the early 1920s, Argentine Raúl Pateras Pescara, while working in Europe, demonstrated one of the first successful applications of cyclic pitch.[3] Coaxial, contra-rotating, biplane rotors could be warped to cyclically increase and decrease the lift they produced; and the rotor hub also could, allowing the aircraft lateral movement without a separate propeller to push or pull it. Pescara also demonstrated the principle of autorotation, by which helicopters safely land after engine failure; by January 1924, Pescara’s helicopter No. 3 could fly for up ten minutes.

Oehmichen N°2 1922
One of Pescara’s contemporaries, Frenchman Etienne Oehmichen, set the first helicopter world record recognized by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) on 14 April 1924, flying his helicopter 360 meters (1,181 ft). On 18 April 1924, Pescara beat Oemichen’s record, flying for a distance of 736 meters (nearly a half mile) in 4 minutes and 11 seconds (about 8 mph, 13 km/h) maintaining a height of six feet (2 m).[16] Not to be outdone, Oehmichen reclaimed the world record on 4 May when he flew his No. 2 machine again for a 14-minute flight covering 5,550 feet (1.05 mi, 1.692 km) while climbing to a height of 50 feet (15 m).[16] Oehmichen also set the 1 km closed-circuit record at 7 minutes 40 seconds.[3]
Meanwhile, Juan de la Cierva was developing the first practical rotorcraft in Spain. In 1923, the aircraft that would become the basis for the modern helicopter rotor began to take shape in the form of an autogyro, Cierva’s C.4.[17] Cierva had discovered aerodynamic and structural deficiencies in his early designs that could cause his autogyros to flip over after takeoff. The flapping hinges that Cierva designed for the C.4 allowed the rotor to develop lift equally on the left and right halves of the rotor disk. A crash in 1927 led to the development of a drag hinge to relieve further stress on the rotor from its flapping motion.[17] These two developments allowed for a stable rotor system, not only in a hover, but in forward flight.
Albert Gillis von Baumhauer, a Dutch aeronautical engineer, began studying rotorcraft design in 1923. His first prototype "flew" ("hopped" and hovered in reality) on 24 September 1925, with Dutch Army-Air arm Captain Floris Albert van Heijst at the controls. The controls that Captain van Heijst used were Von Baumhauer’s inventions, the cyclic and collective. Patents were granted to von Baumhauer for his cyclic and collective controls by the British ministry of aviation on 31 January 1927, under patent number 265,272.
In 1930, the Italian engineer Corradino D’Ascanio built his D’AT3, a coaxial helicopter. His relatively large machine had two, two-bladed, counter-rotating rotors. Control was achieved by using auxiliary wings or servo-tabs on the trailing edges of the blades,[18] a concept that was later adopted by other helicopter designers, including Bleeker and Kaman. Three small propellers mounted to the airframe were used for additional pitch, roll, and yaw control. The D’AT3 held modest FAI speed and altitude records for the time, including altitude (18 m or 59 ft), duration (8 minutes 45 seconds) and distance flown (1,078 m or 3,540 ft).[18]
At this same time, in the Soviet Union, the aeronautical engineers Boris N. Yuriev and Alexei M. Cheremukhin, working at TsAGI, constructed and flew the TsAGI 1-EA single rotor helicopter, which used an open tubing framework, a four blade main rotor, and twin sets (one set of two each at the nose and tail) of 1.8 meters (6 ft) diameter anti-torque rotors. Powered by two M-2 powerplants, themselves up-rated Soviet copies of the Gnome Monosoupape rotary radial engine of World War I, the TsAGI 1-EA made several successful low altitude flights, and by 14 August 1932 Cheremukhin managed to get the 1-EA up to an unofficial altitude of 605 meters (1,985 ft), shattering d’Ascanio’s earlier achievement. As the Soviet Union was not yet a member of the FAI, however, Cheremukhin’s record remained unrecognized.[19][20]
Nicolas Florine, a Russian engineer, built the first twin tandem rotor machine to perform a free flight. It flew in Sint-Genesius-Rode, at the Laboratoire Aérotechnique de Belgique (now von Karman Institute) in April 1933 and attained an altitude of six meters (20 ft) and an endurance of eight minutes. Florine chose a co-rotating configuration because the gyroscopic stability of the rotors would not cancel. Therefore the rotors had to be tilted slightly in opposite directions to counter torque. Using hingeless rotors and co-rotation also minimised the stress on the hull. At the time, it was probably the most stable helicopter in existence.[21][22]
The Bréguet-Dorand Gyroplane Laboratoire was built in 1933. After many ground tests and an accident, it first took flight on 26 June 1935. Within a short time, the aircraft was setting records with pilot Maurice Claisse at the controls. On 14 December 1935, he set a record for closed-circuit flight with a 500-meter (1,600 ft) diameter. The next year, on 26 September 1936, Claisse set a height record of 158 meters (520 ft). And, finally, on 24 November 1936, he set a flight duration record of one hour, two minutes and 5 seconds over a 44 kilometer (27 mi) closed circuit at 44.7 km/h (27.8 mph). The aircraft was destroyed in 1943 by an Allied airstrike at Villacoublay airport.
Birth of an industry

First airmail service by helicopter in Los Angeles, 1947
Despite the success of the Gyroplane Laboratoire, the German Focke-Wulf Fw 61, first flown in 1936, would eclipse its accomplishments. The Fw 61 broke all of the helicopter world records in 1937, demonstrating a flight envelope that had only previously been achieved by the autogyro. In February 1938, Hanna Reitsch became the first female helicopter pilot, exhibiting the Fw 61 before crowds in the Deutschlandhalle.
Nazi Germany would use helicopters in small numbers during World War II for observation, transport, and medical evacuation. The Flettner Fl 282 Kolibri synchropter was used in the Mediterranean Sea, while the Focke Achgelis Fa 223 Drache was used in Europe. Extensive bombing by the Allied forces prevented Germany from producing any helicopters in large quantities during the war.
In the United States, Igor Sikorsky and W. Lawrence LePage, were competing to produce the United States military’s first helicopter. Prior to the war, LePage had received the patent rights to develop helicopters patterned after the Fw 61, and built the XR-1.[23] Meanwhile, Sikorsky had settled on a simpler, single rotor design, the VS-300. After experimenting with configurations to counteract the torque produced by the single main rotor, he settled on a single, smaller rotor mounted vertically on the tailboom.
Developed from the VS-300, Sikorsky’s R-4 became the first mass produced helicopter with a production order for 100 aircraft. The R-4 was the only Allied helicopter to see service in World War II, primarily being used for rescue in Burma, Alaska, and other areas with harsh terrain. Total production would reach 131 helicopters before the R-4 was replaced by other Sikorsky helicopters such as the R-5 and the R-6. In all, Sikorsky would produce over 400 helicopters before the end of World War II.[24]
As LePage and Sikorsky were building their helicopters for the military, Bell Aircraft hired Arthur Young to help build a helicopter using Young’s semi-rigid, teetering-blade rotor design, which used a weighted stabilizing bar. The subsequent Model 30 helicopter demonstrated the simplicity and ease of the design. The Model 30 was developed into the Bell 47, which became the first helicopter certificated for civilian use in the United States. Produced in several countries, the Bell 47 would become the most popular helicopter model for nearly 30 years.
Turbine age
In 1951, at the urging of his contacts at the Department of the Navy, Charles Kaman modified his K-225 helicopter with a new kind of engine, the turboshaft engine. This adaptation of the turbine engine provided a large amount of power to the helicopter with a lower weight penalty than piston engines, with their heavy engine blocks and auxiliary components. On 11 December 1951, the Kaman K-225 became the first turbine-powered helicopter in the world. Two years later, on 26 March 1954, a modified Navy HTK-1, another Kaman helicopter, became the first twin-turbine helicopter to fly. However, it was the Sud Aviation Alouette II that would become the first helicopter to be produced with a turbine-engine.[25]
Reliable helicopters capable of stable hover flight were developed decades after fixed-wing aircraft. This is largely due to higher engine power density requirements than fixed-wing aircraft. Improvements in fuels and engines during the first half of the 20th century were a critical factor in helicopter development. The availability of lightweight turboshaft engines in the second half of the 20th century led to the development of larger, faster, and higher-performance helicopters. While smaller and less expensive helicopters still use piston engines, turboshaft engines are the preferred powerplant for helicopters today.
Uses

Due to the operating characteristics of the helicopter—its ability to takeoff and land vertically, and to hover for extended periods of time, as well as the aircraft’s handling properties under low airspeed conditions—it has been chosen to conduct tasks that were previously not possible with other aircraft, or were time- or work-intensive to accomplish on the ground. Today, helicopter uses include transportation, construction, firefighting, search and rescue, and military uses.

A helicopter used to carry loads connected to long cables or slings is called an aerial crane. Aerial cranes are used to place heavy equipment, like radio transmission towers and large air conditioning units, on the tops of tall buildings, or when an item must be raised up in a remote area, such as a radio tower raised on the top of a hill or mountain. Helicopters are used as aerial cranes in the logging industry to lift trees out of terrain where vehicles cannot travel and where environmental concerns prohibit the building of roads.[26] These operations are referred to as longline because of the long, single sling line used to carry the load.[27]
Helitack is the use of helicopters to combat wildland fires.[28] The helicopters are used for aerial firefighting (or water bombing) and may be fitted with tanks or carry helibuckets. Helibuckets, such as the Bambi bucket, are usually filled by submerging the bucket into lakes, rivers, reservoirs, or portable tanks. Tanks fitted onto helicopters are filled from a hose while the helicopter is on the ground or water is siphoned from lakes or reservoirs through a hanging snorkel as the helicopter hovers over the water source. Helitack helicopters are also used to deliver firefighters, who rappel down to inaccessible areas, and to resupply firefighters. Common firefighting helicopters include variants of the Bell 205 and the Erickson S-64 Aircrane helitanker.
Helicopters are used as air ambulances for emergency medical assistance in situations when an ambulance cannot easily or quickly reach the scene. Helicopters are also used when a patient needs to be transported between medical facilities and air transportation is the most practical method for the safety of the patient. Air ambulance helicopters are equipped to provide medical treatment to a patient while in flight. The use of helicopters as an air ambulance is often referred to as MEDEVAC, and patients are referred to as being "airlifted", or "medevaced".
Oil companies charter helicopters to move workers and parts quickly to remote drilling sites located out to sea or in remote ********s. The speed over boats makes the high operating cost of helicopters cost effective to ensure that oil platforms continue to flow. Companies such as CHC Helicopter, Bristow Helicopters, and Air Logistics specialize in this type of operation.
Police departments and other law enforcement agencies use helicopters to pursue suspects. Since helicopters can achieve a unique aerial view, they are often used in conjunction with police on the ground to report on suspects’ ********s and movements. They are often mounted with lighting and heat-sensing equipment for night pursuits.
Military forces use attack helicopters to conduct aerial attacks on ground targets. Such helicopters are mounted with missile launchers and miniguns. Transport helicopters are used to ferry troops and supplies where the lack of an airstrip would make transport via fixed-wing aircraft impossible. The use of transport helicopters to deliver troops as an attack force on an objective is referred to as Air Assault. Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) helicopter systems of varying sizes are being developed by companies for military reconnaissance and surveillance duties. Naval forces also use helicopters equipped with dipping sonar for anti-submarine warfare, since they can operate from small ships.
Other uses of helicopters include, but are not limited to:
Aerial photography
Motion picture photography
Electronic news gathering
Reflection seismology
Search and Rescue
Tourism or recreation
Transport
Design features

Basic anatomy of a Helicopter
Rotor system
Main article: Helicopter rotor
The rotor system, or more simply rotor, is the rotating part of a helicopter which generates lift. A rotor system may be mounted horizontally as main rotors are, providing lift vertically, or it may be mounted vertically, such as a tail rotor, to provide lift horizontally as thrust to counteract torque effect. The rotor consists of a mast, hub and rotor blades.
The mast is a cylindrical ****l shaft which extends upwards from and is driven by the transmission. At the top of the mast is the attachment point for the rotor blades called the hub. The rotor blades are then attached to the hub by a number of different methods. Main rotor systems are classified according to how the main rotor blades are attached and move relative to the main rotor hub. There are three basic classifications: rigid, semirigid, or fully articulated, although some modern rotor systems use an engineered combination of these types.
Rigid
In a rigid rotor system, the blades, hub, and mast are rigid with respect to each other. The rigid rotor system is mechanically simpler than the fully articulated rotor system. There are no vertical or horizontal hinges so the blades cannot flap or drag, but they can be feathered. Operating loads from flapping and lead/lag forces must be absorbed by bending rather than through hinges. By flexing, the blades themselves compensate for the forces which previously required rugged hinges. The result is a rotor system that has less lag in the control response, because the rotor has much less oscillation.[29] The rigid rotor system also negates the danger of mast bumping inherent in semi-rigid rotors.[30] The rigid rotor can also be called a hingeless rotor.[31]
Semirigid

Semirigid rotor system
A semirigid rotor system allows for two different movements, flapping and feathering. This system is normally composed of two blades, which are rigidly attached to the rotor hub. The hub is then attached to the rotor mast by a trunnion bearing or teetering hinge and is free to tilt with respect to the main rotor shaft. This allows the blades to see-saw or flap together. As one blade flaps down, the other flaps up. Feathering is accomplished by the feathering hinge, which changes the pitch angle of the blade. Since there is no vertical drag hinge, lead-lag forces are absorbed through blade bending.
Helicopters with semi-rigid rotors are vulnerable to a condition known as mast bumping which can cause the rotor flap stops to shear the mast. Mast bumping is normally encountered during low-G maneuvers, so it is written into the operator’s handbook to avoid any low-G conditions.
Fully articulated
In a fully articulated rotor system, each rotor blade is attached to the rotor hub through a series of hinges, which allow the blade to move independently of the others. These rotor systems usually have three or more blades. The blades are allowed to flap, feather, and lead or lag independently of each other. The horizontal hinge, called the flapping hinge, allows the blade to move up and down. This movement is called flapping and is designed to compensate for dissymmetry of lift. The flapping hinge may be located at varying distances from the rotor hub, and there may be more than one hinge. The vertical hinge, called the lead-lag or drag hinge, allows the blade to move back and forth. This movement is called lead-lag, dragging, or hunting. Dampers are usually used to prevent excess back and forth movement around the drag hinge. The purpose of the drag hinge and dampers is to compensate for the acceleration and deceleration caused by Coriolis Effect. Each blade can also be feathered, that is, rotated around its spanwise axis. Feathering the blade means changing the pitch angle of the blade. By changing the pitch angle of the blades the thrust and direction of the main rotor disc can be controlled.
Combination
Modern rotor systems may use the combined principles of the rotor systems mentioned above. Some rotor hubs incorporate a flexible hub, which allows for blade bending (flexing) without the need for bearings or hinges. These systems, called "flextures",[32] are usually constructed from composite material. Elastomeric bearings may also be used in place of conventional roller bearings. Elastomeric bearings are bearings constructed from a rubber type material and have limited movement that is perfectly suited for helicopter applications. Flextures and elastomeric bearings require no lubrication and, therefore, require less maintenance. They also absorb vibration, which means less fatigue and longer service life for the helicopter components.
Antitorque configurations

MD Helicopters 520N NOTAR
Most helicopters have a single main rotor, but torque created as the engine turns the rotor against its air drag causes the body of the helicopter to turn in the opposite direction to the rotor. To eliminate this effect, some sort of antitorque control must be used. The design that Igor Sikorsky settled on for his VS-300 was a smaller rotor mounted vertically on the tail. The tail rotor pushes or pulls against the tail to counter the torque effect, and has become the recognized convention for helicopter design. Some helicopters utilize alternate antitorque controls in place of the tail rotor, such as the ducted fan (called Fenestron or FANTAIL), and NOTAR. NOTAR provides antitorque similar to the way a wing develops lift, through the use of a Coandă effect on the tailboom.[33]

The CH-47 Chinook uses tandem rotors
The use of two or more horizontal rotors turning in opposite directions is another configuration used to counteract the effects of torque on the aircraft without relying on an antitorque tail rotor. This allows the power normally required to drive the tail rotor to be applied to the main rotors, increasing the aircraft’s lifting capacity. Primarily, there are three common configurations that use the counterrotating effect to benefit the rotorcraft. Tandem rotors are two rotors with one mounted behind the other. Coaxial rotors are two rotors that are mounted one above the other with the same axis. Intermeshing rotors are two rotors that are mounted close to each other at a sufficient angle to allow the rotors to intermesh over the top of the aircraft. Transverse rotors is another configuration found on tiltrotors and some earlier helicopters, where the pair of rotors are mounted at each end of the wings or outrigger structures. Tip jet designs permit the rotor to push itself through the air, and avoid generating torque.
Engines

This section needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2022)
The number, size and type of engine used on a helicopter determines the size, function and capability of that helicopter design. The earliest helicopter engines were simple mechanical devices, such as rubber bands or spindles, which relegated the size of helicopters to toys and small models. For a half century before the first airplane flight, steam engines were used to forward the development of the understanding of helicopter aerodynamics, but the limited power did not allow for manned flight. The introduction of the internal combustion engine at the end of the 19th century became the watershed for helicopter development as engines began to be developed and produced that were powerful enough to allow for helicopters able to lift humans.
Early helicopter designs utilized custom-built engines or rotary engines designed for airplanes, but these were soon replaced by more powerful automobile engines and radial engines. The single, most-limiting factor of helicopter development during the first half of the 20th century was the amount of power produced by an engine was not able to overcome the engine’s weight in vertical flight. This was overcome in early successful helicopters by using the smallest engines available. When the compact, flat engine was developed, the helicopter industry found a lighter-weight powerplant easily adapted to small helicopters, although radial engines continued to be used for lager helicopters.
Turbine engines revolutionized the aviation industry, and the turboshaft engine finally gave helicopters an engine with a large amount of power and a low weight penalty. The turboshaft engine was able to be scaled to the size of the helicopter being designed, so that all but the lightest of helicopter models are powered by turbine engines today.
Special jet engines developed to drive the rotor from the rotor tips are referred to as tip jets. Tip jets powered by a remote compressor are referred to as cold tip jets, while those powered by combustion exhaust are referred to as hot tip jets. An example of a cold jet helicopter is the Sud-Ouest Djinn, and an example of the hot tip jet helicopter is the YH-32 Hornet.
Some radio-controlled helicopters and smaller, helicopter-type unmanned aerial vehicles, such as Rotomotion’s SR20 use electric motors.[34] Radio-controlled helicopters may also have piston engines that use fuels other than gasoline, such as Nitromethane.
Flight controls

This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2022)

Cockpit of an Alouette III
Main article: Helicopter flight controls
A helicopter has four flight control inputs. These are the cyclic, the collective, the anti-torque pedals, and the throttle. The cyclic control is usually located between the pilot’s legs and is commonly called the cyclic stick or just cyclic. On most helicopters, the cyclic is similar to a joystick. Although, the Robinson R22 and Robinson R44 have a unique teetering bar cyclic control system and a few helicopters have a cyclic control that descends into the cockpit from overhead.
The control is called the cyclic because it changes the pitch of the rotor blades cyclically. The result is to tilt the rotor disk in a particular direction, resulting in the helicopter moving in that direction. If the pilot pushes the cyclic forward, the rotor disk tilts forward, and the rotor produces a thrust in the forward direction. If the pilot pushes the cyclic to the side, the rotor disk tilts to that side and produces thrust in that direction, causing the helicopter to hover sideways.
The collective pitch control or collective is located on the left side of the pilot’s seat with a settable friction control to prevent inadvertent movement. The collective changes the pitch angle of all the main rotor blades collectively (i.e. all at the same time) and independently of their position. Therefore, if a collective input is made, all the blades change equally, and the result is the helicopter increasing or decreasing in altitude.
The anti-torque pedals are located in the same position as the rudder pedals in a fixed-wing aircraft, and serve a similar purpose, namely to control the direction in which the nose of the aircraft is pointed. Application of the pedal in a given direction changes the pitch of the tail rotor blades, increasing or reducing the thrust produced by the tail rotor and causing the nose to yaw in the direction of the applied pedal. The pedals mechanically change the pitch of the tail rotor altering the amount of thrust produced.
Helicopter rotors are designed to operate at a specific RPM. The throttle controls the power produced by the engine, which is connected to the rotor by a transmission. The purpose of the throttle is to maintain enough engine power to keep the rotor RPM within allowable limits in order to keep the rotor producing enough lift for flight. In single-engine helicopters, the throttle control is a motorcycle-style twist grip mounted on the collective control, while dual-engine helicopters have a power lever for each engine.
A Swashplate transmits the pilot commands to the main rotor blades for articulated rotors.
Flight conditions
There are two basic flight conditions for a helicopter; hover and forward flight.
Hover
Hovering is the most challenging part of flying a helicopter. This is because a helicopter generates its own gusty air while in a hover, which acts against the fuselage and flight control surfaces. The end result is constant control inputs and corrections by the pilot to keep the helicopter where it is required to be. Despite the complexity of the task, the control inputs in a hover are simple. The cyclic is used to eliminate drift in the horizontal plane, that is to control forward and back, right and left. The collective is used to maintain altitude. The pedals are used to control nose direction or heading. It is the interaction of these controls that makes hovering so difficult, since an adjustment in any one control requires an adjustment of the other two, creating a cycle of constant correction.
Forward flight
In forward flight a helicopter’s flight controls behave more like that in a fixed-wing aircraft. Displacing the cyclic forward will cause the nose to pitch down, with a resultant increase in airspeed and loss of altitude. Aft cyclic will cause the nose to pitch up, slowing the helicopter and causing it to climb. Increasing collective (power) while maintaining a constant airspeed will induce a climb while decreasing collective will cause a descent. Coordinating these two inputs, down collective plus aft cyclic or up collective plus forward cyclic, will result in airspeed changes while maintaining a constant altitude. The pedals serve the same function in both a helicopter and a fixed-wing aircraft, to maintain balanced flight. This is done by applying a pedal input in whichever direction is necessary to center the ball in the turn and bank indicator.
Safety

Limitations

This section needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2022)

HAL Dhruv performing aerobatics during the Royal International Air Tattoo in 2022.

RAN Squirrel Helicopters during an acrobatics demonstration – notice how close the two helicopters are together
The main limitation of the helicopter is its slow speed. There are several reasons why a helicopter cannot fly as fast as a fixed wing aircraft. When the helicopter is hovering, the outer tips of the rotor travel at a speed determined by the length of the blade and the RPM. In a moving helicopter, however, the speed of the blades relative to the air depends on the speed of the helicopter as well as on their rotational velocity. The airspeed of the advancing rotor blade is much higher than that of the helicopter itself. It is possible for this blade to exceed the speed of sound, and thus produce vastly increased drag and vibration. See Wave drag.
Because the advancing blade has higher airspeed than the retreating blade and generates a dissymmetry of lift, rotor blades are designed to "flap" – lift and twist in such a way that the advancing blade flaps up and develops a smaller angle of attack. Conversely, the retreating blade flaps down, develops a higher angle of attack, and generates more lift. At high speeds, the force on the rotors is such that they "flap" excessively and the retreating blade can reach too high an angle and stall. For this reason, the maximum safe forward airspeed of a helicopter is given a design rating called VNE, Velocity, Never Exceed.[35] In addition, at extremely high speeds, it is possible for the helicopter to travel faster than the retreating blade which would inevitably stall the blade, regardless of the angle of attack.
During the closing years of the 20th century designers began working on helicopter noise reduction. Urban communities have often expressed great dislike of noisy aircraft, and police and passenger helicopters can be unpopular. The redesigns followed the closure of some city heliports and government action to constrain flight paths in national parks and other places of natural beauty.
Helicopters vibrate. An unadjusted helicopter can easily vibrate so much that it will shake itself apart. To reduce vibration, all helicopters have rotor adjustments for height and weight. Blade height is adjusted by changing the pitch of the blade. Weight is adjusted by adding or removing weights on the rotor head and/or at the blade end caps. Most also have vibration dampers for height and pitch. Some also use mechanical feedback systems to sense and counter vibration. Usually the feedback system uses a mass as a "stable reference" and a linkage from the mass operates a flap to adjust the rotor’s angle of attack to counter the vibration. Adjustment is difficult in part because measurement of the vibration is hard, usually requiring sophisticated accelerometers mounted throughout the airframe and gearboxes. The most common blade vibration adjustment measurement system is to use a stroboscopic flash lamp, and observe painted markings or coloured reflectors on the underside of the rotor blades. The traditional low-tech system is to mount coloured chalk on the rotor tips, and see how they mark a linen sheet. Gearbox vibration most often requires a gearbox overhaul or replacement. Gearbox or drive train vibrations can be extremely harmful to a pilot. The most severe being pain, numbness, loss of tactile discrimination and dexterity.
Hazards

This article is in a list format that may be better presented using prose. You can help by converting this article to prose, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (October 2022)
As with any moving vehicle, unsafe operation could result in loss of control, structural damage, or fatality. The following is a list of some of the potential hazards for helicopters:
Settling with power, also known as a vortex ring state, is when the aircraft is unable to arrest its descent due to the rotor’s downwash interfering with the aerodynamics of the rotor.
Retreating blade stall is experienced during high speed flight and is the most common limiting factor of a helicopter’s forward speed.
Ground resonance affects helicopters with fully articulated rotor systems having a natural lead-lag frequency less than the blade rotation frequency.
Low-G condition affects helicopters with two-bladed main rotors, particularly lightweight helicopters.
Dynamic rollover in which the helicopter pivots around one of the skids and ‘pulls’ itself onto its side.
Powertrain failures, especially those that occur within the shaded area of the height-velocity diagram.
Tail rotor failures which occur from either a mechanical malfunction of the tail rotor control system or a loss of tail rotor thrust authority, called Loss of Tail-rotor Effectiveness (LTE).
Brownout in dusty conditions or whiteout in snowy conditions.
Low Rotor RPM, or rotor droop, in which the engine cannot drive the blades at sufficient RPM to maintain flight.
Wire and tree strikes due to low altitude operations and take-offs and landings in remote ********s.[36]
Deadliest helicopter crashes
Khankala attack: Mi-26 shot down over Chechnya in 2022; 127 killed.
1997 Israeli helicopter disaster: MH-53 crash in Israel in 1997; 73 killed.
1977 Israeli CH-53 crash: CH-53 crash near Yitav in the Jordan Valley on 10 May 1977; 54 killed.
1986 Sumburgh disaster: a British International Helicopters Boeing 234LR Commercial Chinook, Shetland Islands; 45 killed.
2022 Pakistan Army Mil Mi-17 crash: 41 killed.
26 January 2022: a CH-53E Super Stallion from HMH-361 crashed near Ar Rutbah, Iraq killing all 31 service members onboard.[37]

Bell 412
See also

Autogyro
Autorotation (helicopter)
Backpack helicopter
Heliport
Gyrodyne
Jesus nut (the top central big nut that holds the rotor on)
List of rotorcraft
Miniature helicopter
Radio-controlled helicopter
Transverse Flow Effect
Unmanned aerial vehicle
VTOL
References

Notes
^ Dr. J. Gordon Leishman, a Technical Fellow of AHS International, presented a paper at the 64th Annual Forum of the American Helicopter Society International, on the aerodynamic capability of Cornu’s design, arguing that the aircraft lacked the power and rotor loading to lift free of the ground in manned flight.
Footnotes
^ "helicopter". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved: 28 November 2022
^ Cottez 1980, p. 181.
^ a b c d e Munson 1968
^ Hirschberg, Michael J. and David K. Dailey, "Sikorsky." US and Russian Helicopter Development In the 20th Century. American Helicopter Society, International. 7 July 2000.
^ Leishman, J. Gordon. Principles of Helicopter Aerodynamics. Cambridge aerospace series, 18. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022. ISBN 9780521858601
^ "Early Helicopter History". Aerospaceweb.org. Accessed on 1 November 2022.
^ Goebel, Greg. "The Invention Of The Helicopter". Vectorsite.net. Retrieved: 11 November 2022.
^ Fay, John. "Helicopter Pioneers – Evolution of Rotary Wing Aircraft". Helicopter History Site. Retrieved: 28 November 2022.
^ English, Dave, ed. "Predictions", Great Aviation Quotes. Skygod.com. Retrieved: 9 December 2022.
^ a b c Rumerman, Judy. "Early Helicopter Technology". Centennial of Flight Commission. Accessed on 9 December 2022.
^ Pilotfriend.com "Leonardo Da Vinci’s Helical Air Screw". Pilotfriend.com. Accessed on 28 November 2022.
^ Hallion, Richard P. "Pioneers of Flight: Alphonse Pénaud". Air Force Link. Accessed on 1 November 2022.
^ Bryan, George S. Edison: the Man and His Work. Garden City, New York: Garden City Publ., 1926. p. 249.
^ "Pioneers – 1900/1930". Helicopter History Site. Retrieved: 3 May 2022.
^ Dowd, George L. "Flops of famous inventors". Popular Science. December 1930.
^ a b Rumerman, Judy. "Helicopter Development in the Early Twentieth Century". Centennial of Flight Commission. Retrieved: 28 November 2022.
^ a b "The Contributions of the Autogyro". Centennial of Flight Commission. Retrieved: 28 November 2022.
^ a b Spenser 1998
^ [1]
^ [2]
^ [3], Aviastar. Retrieved: 26 June 2022
^ Watkinson 2022, p. 358.
^ Francillon 1997
^ Day, Dwayne A. "Igor Sikorsky – VS 300". Centennial of Flight Commission. Retrieved: 9 December 2022.
^ Connor, R.D. and R.E. Lee. "Kaman K-225". Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. 27 July 2001. Retrieved: 9 December 2022.
^ Day, Dwayne A. "Skycranes". Centennial of Flight Commission. Accessed on 1 October 2022.
^ Webster, L. F. The Wiley Dictionary of Civil Engineering and Construction. New York: Wiley, 1997. ISBN 0-47118-115-3
^ Butler, Bret W., Roberta A. Bartlette, Larry S. Bradshaw, Jack D. Cohen, Patricia L. Andrews, Ted Putnam, and Richard J. Mangan. "Appendix A:Glossary". Fire Behavior Associated with the 1994 South Canyon Fire on Storm King Mountain, Colorado. research paper. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service. September 1998. Accessed on 2 November 2022.
^ Connor, R. Lockheed CL-475. Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum. Revised on 15 August 2022. Accessed at archive.org on 3 September 2022 <http://www.nasm.si.edu/aircraft/lockheed_cl475.htm>.
^ Cox, Taylor. "Blades and Lift". Helis.com. Retrieved: 10 March 2022.
^ Landis, Tony and Jenkins, Dennis R. Lockheed AH-56A Cheyenne – WarbirdTech Volume 27, p.5. Specialty Press, 2000. ISBN 1580070272.
^ FAA Flight Standards Service 2001
^ Frawley 2022, p. 151.
^ Rotomotion SR20 fact sheet, Rotomotion.
^ Rotorcraft Flying Handbook. Washington: Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.. 2022. pp. 3–7. ISBN 1-60239-060-6.
^ Helicopter Accidents in Hawaii
^ "Incident Date 050126 HMH-361 CH-53D – BuNo unknown – incident not yet classified – near Ar Rutbah, Iraq". Marine Corps Combat Helicopter Association. Retrieved on 2022-11-20.
Bibliography
Chiles, James R. The God Machine: From Boomerangs to Black Hawks: The Story of the Helicopter. New York: Bantam Books, 2022. ISBN 0553804472.
Cottez, Henri. Dictionnaire des structures du vocabulaire savant. Paris: Les Usuels du Robert. 1980. ISBN 0-851-77827-5.
Flight Standards Service. Rotorcraft Flying Handbook: FAA Manual H-8083-21. Washington, DC: Federal Aviation Administration, U.S. Dept. of Transportation, 2001. ISBN 1-56027-404-2.
Francillon, René J. McDonnell Douglas Aircraft since 1920: Volume II. London: Putnam, 1997. ISBN 0-851-77827-5.
Frawley, Gerard. The International Directory of Civil Aircraft, 2022-2004. Fyshwick, Canberra, Act, Australia: Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd., 2022, p. 155. ISBN 1-875671-58-7.
Munson, Kenneth. Helicopters and other Rotorcraft since 1907. London: Blandford Publishing, 1968. ISBN 978-0-713-70493-8.
Thicknesse, P. Military Rotorcraft (Brassey’s World Military Technology series). London: Brassey’s, 2000. ISBN 1-857533-25-9.
Watkinson, John. Art of the Helicopter. Oxford: Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann, 2022. ISBN 0750657154
Wragg, David W. Helicopters at War: A Pictorial History. London: R. Hale, 1983. ISBN 0-709-00858-9.
External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Helicopters
American Helicopter Society
Army Aviation Association of America
Helicopter Links – companies, organizations, museums, trade/air shows
Helicopter at HowStuffWorks
Helicopter Association International
Helicopter history site
Helicopter photo gallery
Rotary Action – guide to helicopters in movies and TV
US patent #1848389 – Sikorsky’s helicopter patent (requires Quicktime plugin).
1953 archive video about uses and flight physics of helicopters, (features vintage models). Published by Encyclopaedia Brittanica but now Creative Commons license, Prelinger Archives.
1918 Popular Science article on various imagined and suggested helicopter design concepts – "Flights — of the Imagination: airships that soar only in the day-dreams of their inventors", Popular Science monthly, December 1918, pp. 58-59.

المصـآآدر

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helicopter

www.uae.ii5ii.com

www.google.com

ثانكس bardock

العفو فرعون

أستــــغفر الله العظيم

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

براغرافات الصف العاشر

لو سمحتم أريد براغرافات للأمتحان

أستــــغفر الله العظيم

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

استفسار للصف العاشر

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله و بركاته
اشحالكم ؟؟؟؟ ان شاء الله تمام

بغيت اقولكم ان مناهج الانجليزي مغيرينهم
يعني مواضيع الي في القسم الانجليزي تابعة اي منهج القديم و لا الجديد

والله يا اختي ما نعرف بالضبط .. بس انتي شوفي تاريخ نزول الموضوع وان شاء الله بتعرفين

تقريبـآآ كل مواضيع معهدنـآآ للمناهج اليديدة …*

أستــــغفر الله العظيم

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

عملتوا ايه في امتحان الانجلش صف عاشر " صعب … سهل … يعني " للصف العاشر

أحم احم

السلام عليكم

بالبداية بجد بجد ايه رايكم بامتحان الانجلش

نحن بدبي ثاني امتحان

اللى امتحن انجلش يقلنا عمل ايه وايه رايه بالامتحان سهل طويل صعب رخم

يااااارب يكون سهل عليكم كلكم

دمتم بحفظ الله

ان شـآآء الله السنة الياية …بكون في هـآآ الموضوع

شكرـآآ بنت مصر ع الموضوع

ان شاء الله حبيبتي

بالتوووفيق

سبحان الله و بحمده

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

بليز ساعدوني للصف العاشر

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
اريد منكم اتساعدوني في كتابة التعليق

Assignment

Write a comment at this story.

The story of Albert Einstein
Few people deserve the title “genius” more than Albert Einstein. His theory of relativity is one of the greatest intellectual achievements in human history.

Academically, however, Einstein was less than mediocre.ome teacher told him he would ‘never amount to anything.” Eventually, he was asked to leave school.

After spending some time traveling in Italy, Einstein applied to Zurich Polytechnic School. He failed the admissions exam, and was required to return to high school for a year before being accepted.

On graduating from Zurich he was rejected for an assistantship because no professor would give him a recommendation. He managed to get a job as tutor but soon fired.
Some years later, while working at odd jobs, Einstein submitted a doctoral thesis to the university of Zurich, but it was rejected.

He eventually got a job in the patent office. In his spare time, he continued his studies, quietly earned a doctorate, and began publishing his scientific findings. Finally, after many years in relative obscurity, his work won him the recognition he deserved.

الحــــــــــــــــــــــمد لله

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

الي بحب الله و رسوله يدخل للصف العاشر

بليييييييييييييز ساعدوني بدي تقرير عن اي شي بصفحة 14 موجود 4 تقارير بدي اي واحد بليييييز بالتاب الملون

شو وينكو ما حد يرد

SORY بس ماعندي

مي 2

ما عنديــ

أستغفرك يا رب من كل ذنب

التصنيفات
الصف العاشر

بغيت حل كتاب الوورك بوك صفحة 14 و 15 بس للصف العاشر

السلام عليكم …
بغيت حل كتاب الوورك بوك المب ملون …
صفحة 14 و 15 بس …
ياريت لو تساعدوني بسرعة …

ليش محد يرد … بليز ساعدوني …

خلاص انا زعلت منكم .. محد يرد ولا حد يساعد …
مشكورين …

بسم اللة الرحمن الرحيم

السلام عليكم ورحمة اللة وبركاتة
انا عصا م الهمداني من اليمن وانا حاب ا ساعد على اى شى تبونة قولو وعلى راسى يا بنت زايد وانا مستعد لى شى قولى بس

ابغي حل كتاب الوورك بوك من صفحة 14 الى 18
ياريت لو تساعدني ..

صــ 14

(2)

1 —– intelligence

2—— wind

3——- childish

4——— helpful

5———-creative

6———comfortabhe

7——-careful

8——warm

9 ——–enjog ment

ادري تآخرت بث شو نسوي

تحياتي خويتج غرشه ديو ^^

صـ 18

1-c

2- b

3-D

4- A

5-D

صـ 15

(2)

3- go to the doctor

4- cry

5- say sorry

6- celebrate with mw friendhs

7- do exercise

8- say sorry

walla sorry i just saw .. anything else u want hhelp with ??

اللعم اعز الاسلام و المسلمين