2,109 research outputs found

    Ground simulation and tunnel blockage for a swept, jet-flapped wing tested to very high lift coefficients

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    Ground effects experiments and large/small tunnel interference studies were carried out on a model with a 20 inch (50.8 cm) 25 degree swept wing. The wing is slatted, has a 60 degree knee-blown flap and can be fitted with unflapped tips. A tail rake of pitch-yaw probes can be fitted to the fuselage. Certain check tests were also made with a very similar straight-wing model

    Theoretical evaluation of engine auxiliary inlet design for supersonic V/STOL aircraft

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    A higher order panel method is used to evaluate the potential flow of a 2-D supersonic V/STOL inlet. A nonsymmetric analytical inlet model is developed to closely match a wind tunnel model tested at NASA-Lewis. The analytical inlet used is analyzed for flow characteristics around the lower cowl lip and auxiliary inlets. The results for this analysis are obtained for the output of a computer program produced by the McDonnell Douglas Corp. This program is based on the Hess Panel Method which determines source strengths of panel distributed over a 3-D body. The analytical model was designed for the implementation of a drooped/translated cowl lip and auxiliary inlets as flow improvement concepts. A 40 or 70 deg droop lip can be incorporated on the inlet to determine if these geometry changes result in flow improvements which may reduce the propensity for flow separation on the interior portion of the lip. Auxiliary inlets are used to decrease the mass flow over the inlet lip; thus, the peak flow velocity is reduced at the lip which also lessens the likelihood of flow separation on the interior portion of the lip. A 2, 4, and 6 in. translated lip can be used to also decrease mass flow over the inlet lower lip in the same manner

    Use of experimental separation limits in the theoretical design of V/STOL inlets

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    Experimental data from several model inlets are used to generate two parameters which are related to the limit of operation for inlet flow separation. One parameter, called the diffusion ratio, is the ratio of the peak velocity on the inlet surface to the velocity at the diffuser exit and is related to the boundary-layer separation at low throat Mach numbers. The other parameter, the peak Mach number on the inlet surface, is related to the separation at high throat Mach numbers. These parameters are easily calculated from potential flow solutions and thus can be used as a design tool in screening proposed inlet geometries. An illustrative example of an application to an inlet design study for a tilt nacelle VTOL airplane is presented. The value of contraction ratio required to meet the operating requirements yet allow the inlet to remain free of separation as indicated by the two separation parameters is shown

    Alien Registration- Boles, George A. (Dyer Brook, Aroostook County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/33068/thumbnail.jp

    Marketing of perishable fruit

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    Contains a letter from J.C. Whitten to Dean Walter MillerContains a letter from Walter Miller to S.D. Gromer"Approved, J.C. Whitten"Contains 3 folded tablesTypescript.The strawberry industry has been a large factor in the development of the Ozark region. Its success is dependent upon the proper solution of a great variety of problems which cannot be solved by the growers, the shipping association, the commission merchants, or the consumers alone, as none of these see the product except in certain stages. For that reason it has been thought desirable to study the industry in every phase, from the production of the crop by the grower to its final distribution on the market. The purpose of this investigation has been to secure all possible information and data in regard to the various steps in the development of the Ozark strawberry industry and to study its many phases with special relation to the problems of marketing.Includes bibliographical reference

    Theoretical flow characteristics of inlets for tilting-nacelle VTOL aircraft

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    The results of a theoretical investigation of geometric variables for lift-cruise-fan, tilting nacelle inlets operating at high incidence angles are presented. These geometric variables are investigated for their effects on surface static to free stream pressure ratio, and the separation parameters of maximum to diffuser exit surface velocity ratio and maximum surface Mach number for low speed operating conditions. The geometric parameters varied were the internal lip contraction ratio, external forebody to diffuser exit diameter ratio external forebody length to diameter ratio and internal lip major to minor axis ratio

    Ground simulation and tunnel blockage for a jet-flapped, basic STOL model tested to very high lift coefficients

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    Ground effects experiments and large/small-tunnel interference studies were carried out on a model with a 20-inch (50.8 cm) span wing. The wing, which includes a highly deflected knee-blown flap can be fitted with unflapped tips and slats. A low-mounted tailplane can be fitted to the aft fuselage. Three-component balance meaurements, made with a fixed ground equipped with a single boundary-layer blowing slot, were compared with datum, moving-ground results. Good comparisons were obtained up to model blowing momentum coefficients of approximately two, after which the particular floor blowing settings used proved insufficient to prevent floor separation in the vicinity of the model. Skin friction measurements, taken routinely along the floor centerline, proved invaluable during the analysis of results, and their use is recommended as input to determination of floor BLC setting. A careful investigation was made of pitching moments, including tail-on, close-to-ground cases, with favorable results. Drag proved the most sensitive to the change from a moving to the boundary-layer controlled ground

    Locally Derived, Meteoric Fluid Infiltration Was Responsible for Widespread Late Paleozoic Illite Authigenesis in the Appalachian Basin

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    Isotopic and geochronologic investigation of authigenic, K‐bearing clays in the Appalachian Plateau of the northeastern U.S. Midcontinent yields new insights about the tectonic and diagenetic history of the North American sedimentary cover sequence. In situ texture analysis by High Resolution X‐ray Texture Goniometry indicates preservation of bedding‐parallel diagenetic fabrics with burial depths of 2–5 km, and illite mineralization temperatures are spatially variable, ranging from 80 to 190 °C, correlating to similar depths of 3–6 km. The mineralizing geofluid is surface derived, with δD values ranging from −48‰ to −72‰ (in the range of predicted Pangea meteoric fluid). In addition, we find that mineralizing fluid δD values increase away from the orogenic front, consistent with a rain shadow effect from the high elevation Appalachian orogen. The age of authigenic illite is constrained by 40Ar/39Ar geochronology to 308–318 Ma, reflecting Upper Carboniferous diagenesis. We postulate that far‐field stress transmission from continent‐continent collision created regional permeability pathways for surface fluids, altering the hydrologic architecture of the brittle crust and allowing meteoric fluid infiltration into upper crustal rocks. This interpretation challenges the popular view of tectonically forced, lateral fluid flow from the Appalachian orogen (squeegee hypothesis).Key PointsFar‐field stress due to Alleghanian orogenesis facilitates reorganization of architecture and fluid pathways of the brittle crust and drives regional diagenesisEvidence for locally sourced, surface‐derived fluid challenges popular hypothesis of orogenic fluid expulsionPairing of stable and radiogenic isotope analysis of authigenic illite constrains the relationship between regional diagenesis and tectonismPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156223/2/tect21355.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156223/1/tect21355_am.pd

    LES/RANS Simulation of a Supersonic Reacting Wall Jet

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    This work presents results from large-eddy / Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (LES/RANS) simulations of the well-known Burrows-Kurkov supersonic reacting wall-jet experiment. Generally good agreement with experimental mole fraction, stagnation temperature, and Pitot pressure profiles is obtained for non-reactive mixing of the hydrogen jet with a non-vitiated air stream. A lifted flame, stabilized between 10 and 22 cm downstream of the hydrogen jet, is formed for hydrogen injected into a vitiated air stream. Flame stabilization occurs closer to the hydrogen injection location when a three-dimensional combustor geometry (with boundary layer development resolved on all walls) is considered. Volumetric expansion of the reactive shear layer is accompanied by the formation of large eddies which interact strongly with the reaction zone. Time averaged predictions of the reaction zone structure show an under-prediction of the peak water concentration and stagnation temperature, relative to experimental data and to results from a Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes calculation. If the experimental data can be considered as being accurate, this result indicates that the present LES/RANS method does not correctly capture the cascade of turbulence scales that should be resolvable on the present mesh. Instead, energy is concentrated in the very largest scales, which provide an over-mixing effect that excessively cools and strains the flame. Predictions improve with the use of a low-dissipation version of the baseline piecewise parabolic advection scheme, which captures the formation of smaller-scale structures superimposed on larger structures of the order of the shear-layer width

    Hybrid LES/RANS Simulation of Transverse Sonic Injection into a Mach 2 Flow

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    A computational study of transverse sonic injection of air and helium into a Mach 1.98 cross-flow is presented. A hybrid large-eddy simulation / Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (LES/RANS) turbulence model is used, with the two-equation Menter baseline (Menter-BSL) closure for the RANS part of the flow and a Smagorinsky-type model for the LES part of the flow. A time-dependent blending function, dependent on modeled turbulence variables, is used to shift the closure from RANS to LES. Turbulent structures are initiated and sustained through the use of a recycling / rescaling technique. Two higher-order discretizations, the Piecewise Parabolic Method (PPM) of Colella and Woodward, and the SONIC-A ENO scheme of Suresh and Huyhn are used in the study. The results using the hybrid model show reasonably good agreement with time-averaged Mie scattering data and with experimental surface pressure distributions, even though the penetration of the jet into the cross-flow is slightly over-predicted. The LES/RANS results are used to examine the validity of commonly-used assumptions of constant Schmidt and Prandtl numbers in the intense mixing zone downstream of the injection location
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