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What is Soaring?
The word soaring is often used interchangeably with gliding when
referring to the sport. However, more precisely soaring is the art
of using air currents to stay airborne.
Staying Up
When you throw a paper aeroplane, it always ends up
on the floor, doesn't it? So how does a glider stay up?
Well, much like the paper aeroplane, a glider is always
coming down through the air it is flying through (laws of physics
being what they are!). So to stay up, gliders need to find air that
is going up at least as fast as the glider is descending. Here we
can learn from the birds...
Thermals
On a summer's day, you can see birds circle upwards without flapping
their wings. They are "thermalling". A thermal is a volume
of air that has been heated by the sun more than the surrounding
air - imagine if you were standing on some sunlit concrete, you
would feel warm! As you know, hot air rises, and it is circling
within this air that allows birds - and gliders - to go upwards.
Next you may ask "so how do you know where the thermals are?".
Well, sometimes this is educated guess work, based on how you imagine
ground features below you are warming up. However, often cumulus
(cotton-wool type) clouds form at the top of the thermal, marking
where the thermals are.

Occasionally, you may be joined in the thermal by
a bird - from a swift to an eagle. You can never do it as well as
they can, but it's great fun trying! Thermals are used in cross-country
flying - you climb in a thermal to gain the height to move forwards
to the next thermal on track (or thereabouts). The largest flight
in the UK was done like this. Just over 1000 kilometres were covered
in the flight which took about 12 hours.
 
Ridge Lift
Another way of staying up requires a hill (ridge), and the wind
to blow against the face of it. Try to imagine this scenario - when
the wind hits the hill, it gets forced upwards. Again, it is this
upward movement of air that allows gliders to stay airborne. With
a long ridge, it's possible to do large distances without turning,
generally flying fast and low to stay in the best "lift"
close to the ridge.
 
Wave Lift
Similar to ridge lift is a phenomenon called "wave lift".
This is a little harder to imagine. It arises from the wind blowing
against a hill again, but this time the air comes back down (on
the far side of the hill) and "bounces" off the ground
and goes back up again creating a very smooth upwards flow of air.
Often, this form of lift is capped by a cigar shaped "lenticular"
cloud.

This wave may go back down and up again for several cycles, meaning
that you don't actually have to be close to any hills to use it!
The furthest flights in gliders have been done using this lift -
the best being 2463 kilometres (1530 miles) which was done along
the Andes, all in one flight and one day. Wave lift is also known
to go very high - the world height record in a glider is just a
little short of 50,000 feet!

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