3,498 research outputs found

    Engineering prediction of turbulent skin friction and heat transfer in high-speed flow

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    A large collection of experimental turbulent-skin-friction and heat-transfer data for flat plates and cones was used to determine the most accurate of six of the most popular engineering-prediction methods; the data represent a Mach number range from 4 to 13 and ratio of wall to total temperature ranging from 0.1 to 0.7. The Spalding and Chi method incorporating virtual-origin concepts was found to be the best prediction method for Mach numbers less than 10; the limited experimental data for Mach numbers greater than 10 were not well predicted by any of the engineering methods except the Coles method

    Effect of two-dimensional multiple sine-wave protrusions of the pressure and heat-transfer distributions for a flat plate at Mach 6

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    Effect of two dimensional multiple sine wave protrusions on pressure and heat transfer distributions for flat plate in hypersonic flo

    Discrete sonic jets used as boundary-layer trips at Mach numbers of 6 and 8.5

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    The effect of discrete three-dimensional sonic jets used to promote transition on a sharp-leading-edge flat plate at Mach numbers of 6 and 8.5 and unit Reynolds numbers as high as 2.5 x 100,000 per cm in the Langley 20-inch hypersonic tunnels is discussed. An examination of the downstream flow-field distortions associated with the discrete jets for the Mach 8.5 flow was also conducted. Jet trips are found to produce lengths of turbulent flow comparable to those obtained for spherical-roughness-element trips while significantly reducing the downstream flow distortions. A Reynolds number based upon secondary jet penetration into a supersonic main flow is used to correlate jet-trip effectiveness just as a Reynolds number based upon roughness height is used to correlate spherical-trip effectiveness. Measured heat-transfer data are in agreement with the predictions

    Title IX: Sex Discrimination in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools

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    Calculation methods for compressible turbulent boundary layers, 1976

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    Equations and closure methods for compressible turbulent boundary layers are discussed. Flow phenomena peculiar to calculation of these boundary layers were considered, along with calculations of three dimensional compressible turbulent boundary layers. Procedures for ascertaining nonsimilar two and three dimensional compressible turbulent boundary layers were appended, including finite difference, finite element, and mass-weighted residual methods

    Teaching Ethics and Professionalism in Litigation: Some Thoughts

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    Rambo Depositions Revisited: Controlling Attorney-Client Consultations During Depositions

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    Rambo Depositions Revisited: Controlling Attorney-Client Consultations During Depositions

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