The air that flows over the top part of an airplane's wing moves faster than the air that flows across the bottom. This faster moving air causes the wing to rise.
Which of the following principles or laws helps explain why the wing rises?
As an airplane moves through the air, its wings cause changes in the
speed and pressure of the air moving past them. These changes result in
the upward force called lift.
The Bernoulli principle states that an increase in the speed of a fluid
occurs simultaneously with a decrease in the pressure exerted by the
fluid.
A wing is shaped and tilted so the air moving over it moves faster than
the air moving under it. As air speeds up, its pressure goes down. So
the faster-moving air above exerts less pressure on the wing than the
slower-moving air below. The result is an upward push on the wing—lift!