Timeline of aviation - 18th century

   

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18th century
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This is a timeline of aviation - 18th century

18th century aviation

  • 1700-1799'
    • The kite is popular during the century.
  • 1709
    • Father Laurenco de Gusmao designs a model hot air balloon and demonstrates it to King John V of Portugal.
  • 1716
    • Well thought-out glider-project of the Swedish scholar Emanuel Swedenborg. Basis for his construction are bird flight and the glider kite.
  • 1738
    • In his Hydrodynamica the Swiss scholar Daniel Bernoulli (1700-1782) formulates the principle of the conservation of energy for gases (Bernoulli's law), the relationship between pressure and velocity in a flow.
  • 1746
    • English military engineer Benjamin Robins (1707-1751) invented a whirling arm apparatus to determine drag.
  • 1766
  • 1772
    • Abbé Desforges unsuccessfully tries to fly an apparatus with a basket and oars made of bird feathers.
  • 1777
    • In St.Louis, the prisoner Dominikus Dufort jumps from a high building with a parachute garment and is rewarded with a spontaneous collection of money.
  • 1781
    • Italian scientist Tiberiua Cavallo, then living in England, sends up soap bubbles filled with oxygen.
  • 1783
    • Sebastian Lenormand does several parachute jumps from the tower of the observatory in Montpellier.
  • 1783
    • June 5, unmanned flight of the Montgolfier brothers hot-air-balloon (Montgolfičre) in Vivarais, France. The Montgolfiers demonstrate a hot air balloon in public, at Annonay.
    • August 27, flight of an unmanned experimental hydrogen-balloon in Paris (built by Professor Charles and the brothers Roberts).
    • September 19, the Montgolfiers launch a sheep, duck, and rooster in a hot-air balloon in a demonstration for King Louis XVI of France. The balloon rises some 500 m (1,700 ft) and returns the animals unharmed to the ground.
    • October 15, Pilātre de Rozier and Marquis d'Arlandes rise into the air in a Montgolfičre tethered to the ground in Paris. Pilātre de Rozier becomes the first human passenger in a hot-air balloon, rising 26 m (84 ft).
    • November 21, in a flight lasting 25 minutes, de Rozier and d'Arlandes take the first untethered ride in a Montgolfičre in Paris, the first human passengers carried in free flight by a hot-air balloon.
    • December 1, Charles and his assistant Robert make the first flight in a hydrogen-filled balloon (Charliere). On his second flight, Charles reached an altitude of 2,700 m over Vivarais.
    • Charles launches the first hydrogen-filled balloon. It flies 25 km (15 miles) from Paris to Gonesse and is destroyed by frightened peasants.
    • Charles and Ainé Roberts become the first to fly in a hydogen-filled balloon. They travel from Paris to Nesles, a distance of 43 km (27 miles).
  • 1784
    • Jean-Pierre Blanchard fits a hand-powered propeller to a balloon, the first recorded means of propulsion carried aloft.
    • Pilātre de Rozier and the chemist Proust rise with a Montgolfičre up to 4,000 m.
    • September 19, the brothers Robert and Colin Hullin take a balloon ride over 186 km from Paris to Beuvry.
    • Jean Baptiste Meusnier makes an oblong balloon to explore unknown areas, with an airscrew driven by muscle power.
  • 1785
    • July 1, Jean-Pierre Blanchard and the American meteorologist John Jeffries cross the English Channel from Dover to Guines in an aircraft.
    • June 15, Pilātre de Rozier and Jules Romain become the first known aeronautical fatalities when their balloon crashes during an attempt to cross the English Channel.
    • Richard Crosbie makes several unsuccessful attempts to cross the Irish Channel in a helium-filled balloon.
  • 1793
  • 1794
  • 1797
    • October 22, André-Jacques Garnerin jumps from a balloon from 6,500 feet over Monceau Park in Paris in a 23-foot-diameter parachute made of white canvas with a basket attached. He was declared "official French aeronaut of the state".
  • 1799
    • Englishman Sir George Cayley (1773-1857) sketched a glider with a rudder unit and an elevator unit. His manuscript is considered to be the starting point of the scientific research on heavier than air flying machines. It was Cayley who helped to sort out the confusion of that time. …"He knew more than any of his predecessors … and successors up to the end of the 19th century." - Orville Wright. Even so his ideas did not affect further development very much.


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