. Tail

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n aircraft’s tail helps to keep it stable in the air. The tail’s con­trol surfaces make the aircraft climb, dive, and turn to the left or right.

An airplane’s tail acts like an arrow’s feathers or a firework rocket’s long stick. The tail keeps the plane pointing in the right direction, nose first. Without a tail in place, most airplanes would crash to the ground. The Northrop B-2 Spirit stealth bomber, for example, has no tail and is therefore a very unstable aircraft. It only can be flown with the help of a powerful flight computer.

Stabilizers

A typical airplane tail has a vertical sta­bilizer, or fin, that stands up on top of the fuselage, and a horizontal stabilizer, or tailplane, which sticks out from either side of the tail fin. The fin has a moving part at the back called the rudder. When the rudder is turned to the left, the air
flowing around it pushes the plane’s tail to the right, and the aircraft’s nose turns to the left. When the rudder turns to the right, the aircraft’s nose turns to the right.

The tailplane has moving parts at the back called elevators. The elevators con­trol the aircraft’s pitch. When the eleva­tors tilt up, air flowing around them pushes the aircraft’s tail down and brings the nose up. When the elevators tilt down, the aircraft’s nose tips down as well.