4,576 research outputs found
Linearized potential solution for an airfoil in nonuniform parallel streams
A small perturbation potential flow theory is applied to the problem of determining the chordwise pressure distribution, lift and pitching moment of a thin airfoil in the middle of five parallel streams. This theory is then extended to the case of an undisturbed stream having a given smooth velocity profile. Two typical examples are considered and the results obtained are compared with available solutions of Euler's equations. The agreement between these two results is not quite satisfactory. Possible reasons for the differences are indicated
Studies on the interference of wings and propeller slipstreams
The small disturbance potential flow theory is applied to determine the lift of an airfoil in a nonuniform parallel stream. The given stream is replaced by an equivalent stream with a certain number of velocity discontinuities, and the influence of these discontinuities is obtained by the method of images. Next, this method is extended to the problem of an airfoil in a nonuniform stream of smooth velocity profile. This model allows perturbation velocity potential in a rotational undisturbed stream. A comparison of these results with numerical solutions of Euler equations indicates that, although approximate, the present method provides useful information about the interaction problem while avoiding the need to solve the Euler equations
A rapid method for the computation of equilibrium chemical composition of air to 15000 K
A rapid computational method has been developed to determine the chemical composition of equilibrium air to 15000 K. Eleven chemically reacting species, i.e., O2, N2, O, NO, N, NO+, e-, N+, O+, Ar, and Ar+ are included. The method involves combining algebraically seven nonlinear equilibrium equations and four linear elemental mass balance and charge neutrality equations. Computational speeds for determining the equilibrium chemical composition are significantly faster than the often used free energy minimization procedure. Data are also included from which the thermodynamic properties of air can be computed. A listing of the computer program together with a set of sample results are included
A modified lifting line theory for wing-propeller interference
An inviscid incompressible model for the interaction of a wing with a single propeller slipstream is presented. The model allows the perturbation quantities to be potential even though the undisturbed flow is rotational. The governing equations for the spanwise lift distribution are derived and a simple method of solving these is indicated. Spanwise lift and induced drag distribution for two cases are computed
A frictional Cosserat model for the flow of granular materials through a vertical channel
A rigid-plastic Cosserat model has been used to study dense, fully developed
flow of granular materials through a vertical channel. Frictional models based
on the classical continuum do not predict the occurrence of shear layers, at
variance with experimental observations. This feature has been attributed to
the absence of a material length scale in their constitutive equations. The
present model incorporates such a material length scale by treating the
granular material as a Cosserat continuum. Thus localised couple stresses exist
and the stress tensor is asymmetric. The velocity profiles predicted by the
model are in close agreement with available experimental data. The predicted
dependence of the shear layer thickness on the width of the channel is in
reasonable agreement with data. In the limit of the ratio of the particle
diameter to the half-width of the channel being small, the model predicts that
the shear layer thickness scaled by the particle diameter grows.Comment: 17 pages, 12 PostScript figures, uses AmsLaTeX, psfrag and natbib.
Accepted for publication in Acta Mechanic
A scheme for amplification and discrimination of photons
A scheme for exploring photon number amplification and discrimination is
presented based on the interaction of a large number of two-level atoms with a
single mode radiation field. The fact that the total number of photons and
atoms in the excited states is a constant under time evolution in Dicke model
is exploited to rearrange the atom-photon numbers. Three significant
predictions emerge from our study: Threshold time for initial exposure to
photons, time of perception (time of maximum detection probability), and
discrimination of first few photon states.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, RevteX, Minor revision, References adde
Flowfield Analysis of a Small Entry Probe (SPRITE) Tested in an Arc Jet
Results of simulations of flow of an arc-heated stream around a 14-inch diameter 45 sphere-cone configuration are presented. Computations are first benchmarked against pressure and heat flux measurements made using copper slug calorimeters of different shapes and sizes. The influence of catalycity of copper on computed results is investigated. Good agreements between predictions and measurements are obtained by assuming the copper slug to be partially catalytic to atomic recombination. With total enthalpy estimates obtained from these preliminary computations, calculations are then performed for the test article, with the nozzle and test article considered as an integrated whole the same procedure adopted for calorimeter simulations. The resulting heat fluxes at select points on the test article (points at which fully instrumented plugs were placed) are used in material thermal response code calculations. Predicted time histories of temperature are compared against thermocouple data from the instrumented plugs, and recession determined. Good agreement is obtained for in-depth thermocouples
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