Who invented the jet engine?

The first flight by a jet-propelled aircraft was made in Germany on August 27, 1939. Its engine was designed by Hans-Joachim von Ohain, who had conceived the idea while a student at Gottingen University in Lower Saxony. Unknown to von Ohain, the British inventor and aviator Frank Whittle had thought of the idea some years earlier. But his engine did not have its first flight until May 14, 1941.

    Briefly, a jet engine takes in air from the atmosphere, compresses it, and uses it in burning fuel. The mixture of hot gases is then expelled through a nozzle in a powerful backward jet which propels the aircraft forwards.

     This forward thrust is the effect of a scientific principle first explained by the English scientist Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727). He pointed out that with every action there is a reaction which is equal but opposite to it. Thus when a gun is fired, the forward movement of the shell is matched by the backward recoil of the barrel. In a similar way the reaction to the jet exhaust drives the engine forward. The thrust is obtained by the pressure of the jet against the inside of the nozzle and not, as many people suppose, by the exhaust gases “pushing” against the atmosphere.

     The jet engine, whether turbojet, turboprop, ramjet or turbofan, weights less than a piston engine of comparative power and can be much more streamlined.

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