Propulsion method
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Propulsion method may refer to a number of different articles:
- For a list of space propulsion methods, see spacecraft propulsion.
- For water propulsion, the most common types are underwater propeller, water jet, paddle wheel and, experimentally, magnetohydrodynamic drive. Sails are also common, and historically represented the most significant form of early propulsion for large watercraft. Paddles or oars were probably the earliest form of water propulsion.
- For air propulsion, the most common types are propeller, jet engine, turboprop, ramjet, rocket propulsion, and, experimentally, scramjet.
- For ground propulsion, virtually all of the above have been used at one time or another. Historically, vehicles were drawn by animals or driven by steam. Nowadays, most ground vehicles use wheels of one sort or another, but the power plant used to drive them can vary widely. In modern times, most vehicles use some form of internal-combustion engine, with electric motors supplementing them. See vehicle propulsion.
- Alternative propulsion
- Nuclear propulsion
- For these and other types of transportation, see transport.