465 research outputs found
Investigation of installation effects on twin-engine convergent-divergent nozzles
An investigation was conducted in the Langley 16-Foot Transonic Tunnel to determine installation effects on convergent-divergent nozzles applicable to twin-engine reduced-power supersonic cruise aircraft. Tests were conducted at Mach numbers from 0.50 to 1.20, angles of attack from -5 deg to 9 deg, and at nozzle pressure ratios from jet off (1.0) to 8.0. The effects of empennage arrangement, nozzle length, and afterbody closure on total and component drag coefficients were investigated
Effect of simulated in-flight thrust reversing on vertical-tail loads of F-18 and F-15 airplane models
Investigations were conducted in the Langley 16-Foot Transonic Tunnel to provide data on a 0.10-scale model of the prototype F-18 airplane and a 0.047-scale model of the F-15 three-surface configuration (canard, wing, and horizontal tails). Test data were obtained at static conditions and at Mach numbers from 0.6 to 1.2 over an angle-of-attack range from 2 deg to 15 deg. Nozzle pressure ratio was varied from jet off to about 8.0
Collective resonances in plasmonic crystals: Size matters
Periodic arrays of metallic nanoparticles may sustain Surface Lattice
Resonances (SLRs), which are collective resonances associated with the
diffractive coupling of Localized Surface Plasmon Resonances (LSPRs). By
investigating a series of arrays with varying number of particles, we traced
the evolution of SLRs to its origins. Polarization resolved extinction spectra
of arrays formed by a few nanoparticles were measured, and found to be in very
good agreement with calculations based on a coupled dipole model. Finite size
effects on the optical properties of the arrays are observed, and our results
provide insight into the characteristic length scales for collective plasmonic
effects: for arrays smaller than 5 x 5 particles, the Q-factors of SLRs are
lower than those of LSPRs; for arrays larger than 20 x 20 particles, the
Q-factors of SLRs saturate at a much larger value than those of LSPRs; in
between, the Q-factors of SLRs are an increasing function of the number of
particles in the array.Comment: 4 figure
Computational Study of an Axisymmetric Dual Throat Fluidic Thrust Vectoring Nozzle for a Supersonic Aircraft Application
A computational investigation of an axisymmetric Dual Throat Nozzle concept has been conducted. This fluidic thrust-vectoring nozzle was designed with a recessed cavity to enhance the throat shifting technique for improved thrust vectoring. The structured-grid, unsteady Reynolds- Averaged Navier-Stokes flow solver PAB3D was used to guide the nozzle design and analyze performance. Nozzle design variables included extent of circumferential injection, cavity divergence angle, cavity length, and cavity convergence angle. Internal nozzle performance (wind-off conditions) and thrust vector angles were computed for several configurations over a range of nozzle pressure ratios from 1.89 to 10, with the fluidic injection flow rate equal to zero and up to 4 percent of the primary flow rate. The effect of a variable expansion ratio on nozzle performance over a range of freestream Mach numbers up to 2 was investigated. Results indicated that a 60 circumferential injection was a good compromise between large thrust vector angles and efficient internal nozzle performance. A cavity divergence angle greater than 10 was detrimental to thrust vector angle. Shortening the cavity length improved internal nozzle performance with a small penalty to thrust vector angle. Contrary to expectations, a variable expansion ratio did not improve thrust efficiency at the flight conditions investigated
A Computational Study of a New Dual Throat Fluidic Thrust Vectoring Nozzle Concept
A computational investigation of a two-dimensional nozzle was completed to assess the use of fluidic injection to manipulate flow separation and cause thrust vectoring of the primary jet thrust. The nozzle was designed with a recessed cavity to enhance the throat shifting method of fluidic thrust vectoring. Several design cycles with the structured-grid, computational fluid dynamics code PAB3D and with experiments in the NASA Langley Research Center Jet Exit Test Facility have been completed to guide the nozzle design and analyze performance. This paper presents computational results on potential design improvements for best experimental configuration tested to date. Nozzle design variables included cavity divergence angle, cavity convergence angle and upstream throat height. Pulsed fluidic injection was also investigated for its ability to decrease mass flow requirements. Internal nozzle performance (wind-off conditions) and thrust vector angles were computed for several configurations over a range of nozzle pressure ratios from 2 to 7, with the fluidic injection flow rate equal to 3 percent of the primary flow rate. Computational results indicate that increasing cavity divergence angle beyond 10 is detrimental to thrust vectoring efficiency, while increasing cavity convergence angle from 20 to 30 improves thrust vectoring efficiency at nozzle pressure ratios greater than 2, albeit at the expense of discharge coefficient. Pulsed injection was no more efficient than steady injection for the Dual Throat Nozzle concept
Experimental Study of an Axisymmetric Dual Throat Fluidic Thrust Vectoring Nozzle for Supersonic Aircraft Application
An axisymmetric version of the Dual Throat Nozzle concept with a variable expansion ratio has been studied to determine the impacts on thrust vectoring and nozzle performance. The nozzle design, applicable to a supersonic aircraft, was guided using the unsteady Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes computational fluid dynamics code, PAB3D. The axisymmetric Dual Throat Nozzle concept was tested statically in the Jet Exit Test Facility at the NASA Langley Research Center. The nozzle geometric design variables included circumferential span of injection, cavity length, cavity convergence angle, and nozzle expansion ratio for conditions corresponding to take-off and landing, mid climb and cruise. Internal nozzle performance and thrust vectoring performance was determined for nozzle pressure ratios up to 10 with secondary injection rates up to 10 percent of the primary flow rate. The 60 degree span of injection generally performed better than the 90 degree span of injection using an equivalent injection area and number of holes, in agreement with computational results. For injection rates less than 7 percent, thrust vector angle for the 60 degree span of injection was 1.5 to 2 degrees higher than the 90 degree span of injection. Decreasing cavity length improved thrust ratio and discharge coefficient, but decreased thrust vector angle and thrust vectoring efficiency. Increasing cavity convergence angle from 20 to 30 degrees increased thrust vector angle by 1 degree over the range of injection rates tested, but adversely affected system thrust ratio and discharge coefficient. The dual throat nozzle concept generated the best thrust vectoring performance with an expansion ratio of 1.0 (a cavity in between two equal minimum areas). The variable expansion ratio geometry did not provide the expected improvements in discharge coefficient and system thrust ratio throughout the flight envelope of typical a supersonic aircraft. At mid-climb and cruise conditions, the variable geometry design compromised thrust vector angle achieved, but some thrust vector control would be available, potentially for aircraft trim. The fixed area, expansion ratio of 1.0, Dual Throat Nozzle provided the best overall compromise for thrust vectoring and nozzle internal performance over the range of NPR tested compared to the variable geometry Dual Throat Nozzle
Design Enhancements of the Two-Dimensional, Dual Throat Fluidic Thrust Vectoring Nozzle Concept
A Dual Throat Nozzle fluidic thrust vectoring technique that achieves higher thrust-vectoring efficiencies than other fluidic techniques, without sacrificing thrust efficiency has been developed at NASA Langley Research Center. The nozzle concept was designed with the aid of the structured-grid, Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes computational fluidic dynamics code PAB3D. This new concept combines the thrust efficiency of sonic-plane skewing with increased thrust-vectoring efficiencies obtained by maximizing pressure differentials in a separated cavity located downstream of the nozzle throat. By injecting secondary flow asymmetrically at the upstream minimum area, a new aerodynamic minimum area is formed downstream of the geometric minimum and the sonic line is skewed, thus vectoring the exhaust flow. The nozzle was tested in the NASA Langley Research Center Jet Exit Test Facility. Internal nozzle performance characteristics were defined for nozzle pressure ratios up to 10, with a range of secondary injection flow rates up to 10 percent of the primary flow rate. Most of the data included in this paper shows the effect of secondary injection rate at a nozzle pressure ratio of 4. The effects of modifying cavity divergence angle, convergence angle and cavity shape on internal nozzle performance were investigated, as were effects of injection geometry, hole or slot. In agreement with computationally predicted data, experimental data verified that decreasing cavity divergence angle had a negative impact and increasing cavity convergence angle had a positive impact on thrust vector angle and thrust efficiency. A curved cavity apex provided improved thrust ratios at some injection rates. However, overall nozzle performance suffered with no secondary injection. Injection holes were more efficient than the injection slot over the range of injection rates, but the slot generated larger thrust vector angles for injection rates less than 4 percent of the primary flow rate
Negative-Index Metamaterials: Second-Harmonic Generation, Manley-Rowe Relations and Parametric Amplification
Second harmonic generation and optical parametric amplification in
negative-index metamaterials (NIMs) are studied. The opposite directions of the
wave vector and the Poynting vector in NIMs results in a "backward"
phase-matching condition, causing significant changes in the Manley-Rowe
relations and spatial distributions of the coupled field intensities. It is
shown that absorption in NIMs can be compensated by backward optical parametric
amplification. The possibility of distributed-feedback parametric oscillation
with no cavity has been demonstrated. The feasibility of the generation of
entangled pairs of left- and right-handed counter-propagating photons is
discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Galactic populations of radio and gamma-ray pulsars in the polar cap model
We simulate the characteristics of the Galactic population of radio and
-ray pulsars using Monte Carlo techniques. At birth, neutron stars are
spatially distributed in the Galactic disk, with supernova-kick velocities, and
randomly dispersed in age back to years. They are evolved in the
Galactic gravitational potential to the present time. From a radio luminosity
model, the radio flux is filtered through a selected set of radio-survey
parameters. -ray luminosities are assigned using the features of recent
polar cap acceleration models invoking space-charge-limited flow, and a pulsar
death valley further attenuates the population of radio-loud pulsars. Assuming
a simple emission geometry with aligned radio and -ray beams of 1
steradian solid angle, our model predicts that EGRET should have seen 7
radio-loud and 1 radio-quiet, -ray pulsars. With much improved
sensitivity, GLAST, on the other hand, is expected to observe 76 radio-loud and
74 radio-quiet, -ray pulsars of which 7 would be identified as pulsed
sources. We also explore the effect of magnetic field decay on the
characteristics of the radio and -ray pulsar populations. Including
magnetic field decay on a timescale of 5 Myr improves agreement with the radio
pulsar population and increases the predicted number of GLAST detected pulsars
to 90 radio-loud and 101 radio-quiet (9 pulsed) -ray pulsars. The lower
flux threshold allows GLAST to detect -ray pulsars at larger distances
than those observed by the radio surveys used in this study.Comment: 38 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication v565 n1 Ap
- …