16,898 research outputs found

    51st Commencement Address

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    Fluid mechanics mechanisms in the stall process of helicopters

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    Recent experimental results from airfoils in the Mach number, Reynolds number, or reduced frequency ranges typical of helicopter rotor blades have identified the most influential flow mechanisms in the dynamic stall process. The importance of secondary shed vortices, downstream wake action, and the flow in the separated region is generally acknowledged but poorly understood. By means of surface pressure cross-correlations and flow field measurements in static stall, several new hypotheses have been generated. It is proposed that vortex shedding may be caused by acoustic disturbances propagating forward in the lower (pressure) surface boundary layer, that wake closure is a misnomer, and that the shed vortex leaves a trail of vorticity that forms a turbulent free shear layer. The known dynamic stall flow mechanisms are reviewed and the potential importance of recently proposed and hypothetical flow phenomena with respect to helicopter blade aeroelastic response are assessed

    COMMUNITY AND FAMILY ADJUSTMENTS

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    Community/Rural/Urban Development,

    Applications Technology Satellite /ATS-1/ Suprathermal Ion Detector experiment /SID/ data reduction and analysis Final report, 6 Dec. 1966 - 30 Mar. 1970

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    Data analysis on ATS-1 Suprathermal Ion Detector /SID/ measurements of low energy plasma flow in magnetopause boundar

    NASTRAN analysis of an air storage piping system

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    The application of NASTRAN to a complex piping design evaluation problem is summarized. Emphasis is placed on structural modeling aspects, problems encountered in modeling and analyzing curved pipe sections, principal results, and relative merits of using NASTRAN as a pipe analysis and design tool. In addition, the piping and manifolding system was analyzed with SNAP (Structural Network Analysis Program). The parallel SNAP study provides a basis for limited comparisons between NASTRAN and SNAP as to solution agreement and computer execution time and costs

    Study of solution procedures for nonlinear structural equations

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    A method for the redution of the cost of solution of large nonlinear structural equations was developed. Verification was made using the MARC-STRUC structure finite element program with test cases involving single and multiple degrees of freedom for static geometric nonlinearities. The method developed was designed to exist within the envelope of accuracy and convergence characteristic of the particular finite element methodology used
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