3,030 research outputs found

    Problems pilots face involving wind shear

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    Educating pilots and the aviation industry about wind shears presents a major problem associated with this meteorological phenomenon. The pilot's second most pressing problem is the need for a language to discuss wind shear encounters with other pilots so that the reaction of the aircraft to the wind shear encounter can be accurately described. Another problem is the flight director which gives a centered pitch command for a given angular displacement from the glide slope. It was suggested that they should instead be called flight path command and should not center unless the aircraft is actually correcting to the flight path

    Aspects of Labor Economics

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    Summary Proceedings of a Wind Shear Workshop

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    A number of recent program results and current issues were addressed: the data collection phase of the highly successful Joint Airport Weather Study (JAWS) Project and the NASA-B5f7B Gust Gradient Program, the use of these data for flight crew training through educational programs (e.g., films) and with manned flight training simulators, methods for post-accident determination of wind conditions from flight data recorders, the microburst wind shear phenomenon which was positively measured and described the ring vortex as a possible generating mechanism, the optimum flight procedure for use during an unexpected wind shear encounter, evaluation of the low-level wind shear alert system (LLWSAS), and assessment of the demonstrated and viable application of Doppler radar as an operational wind shear warning and detection system

    Pilot interface with fly by wire control systems

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    Aircraft designers are rapidly moving toward full fly by wire control systems for transport aircraft. Aside from pilot interface considerations such as location of the control input device and its basic design such as side stick, there appears to be a desire to change the fundamental way in which a pilot applies manual control. A typical design would have the lowest order of manual control be a control wheel steering mode in which the pilot is controlling an autopilot. This deprives the pilot of the tactile sense of angle of attack which is inherent in present aircraft by virtue of certification requirements for static longitudinal stability whereby a pilot must either force the aircraft away from its trim angle of attack or trim to a new angle of attack. Whether or not an aircraft actually has positive stability, it can be made to feel to a pilot as though it does by artificial feel. Artificial feel systems which interpret pilot input as pitch rate or G rate with automatic trim have proven useful in certain military combat maneuvers, but their transposition to other more normal types of manual control may not be justified

    Wind shear procedures and the instrumentation

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    The effect of pitch rate on abort landing caused by wind shear encounters is discussed. Optimal trajectories, airspeed, and wind shear warning systems are briefly discussed. The bulk of the presentation is in viewgraph form

    Exact methods for modal transient response analysis including feedback control

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    This paper presents a modal method for the analysis of controlled structural systems that retains the uncoupled nature of the classical transient response analysis of a structure subjected to a prescribed time-varying load. The control force is expanded as a Taylor series that remains on the right side of the equations, and it does not lead to a computational approach that requires coupling between modes on the left side. Retaining a sufficient number of terms in the series produces a solution to the modal equations that is accurate to machine precision. The approach is particularly attractive for large problems in which standard matrix exponential methods become computationally prohibitive. Numerical results are presented to show the accuracy and efficiency of the proposed approach for dynamic feedback compensation of a truss structure with local member modes in the controller bandwidth

    Experimental Observations of Aerodynamic and Heating Test on Insulating Heat Shields

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    Several different types of insulating heat shields have been subjected to aerodynamic tests and radiant-heating tests in order to obtain a better insight into the problems involved when the primary structure of m aerodynamically heated vehicle is substantially cooler than the exposed external surface. One of the main problems was considered to be a proper allowance for thermal expansion caused by these large temperature differences, so that undue distortion or thermal stresses would not occur in either the outer shield or the underlying structure. corrugated outer skin with suitably designed expansion joints was a feature of all the specimens tested

    Managing livestock manure for profitability and water quality protection

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    The Manure Management interdisciplinary research issue team formed in 1990 to study several issues related to Iowa\u27s rapidly accel­ erating increase in animal production, both in the number and size of animal units, particu­ larly swine units. Swine facilities being built in Iowa today include a number of 3,500-head farrowing units and 15,000-head (and larger) finishing units. The poultry industry has also grown rapidly. Economic pressures have caused animal production systems to become larger and more concentrated, requiring sig­ nificant capital investment. This concentra­ tion has occurred at the family farm level as well as in production systems controlled by large agribusiness firms. One disturbing trend is the increase in family farm units that do not own the animals they are producing
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