26 research outputs found

    Performance of an All-internal Conical Compression Inlet with Annular Throat Bleed at Mach Number 5.0

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    An all-internal conical compression inlet with annular bleed at the throat was investigated at Mach 5.0 and zero angle of attack. The minimum contraction ratio of the supersonic diffuser, coincident with a mass-flow ratio of 1.0, was determined to be 0.084 as compared with the isentropic contraction ratio of 0.04 at Mach 5.0. The over-all inlet performance was very sensitive to the amount of annular bleed at the throat because of the extensive boundary layer. For example, the critical recovery varied from 41 percent with 6-percent bleed to 59 percent with 25-percent bleed. Decreasing the spacing between the supersonic and subsonic diffusers increased the critical mass-flow ratio but reduced the range of subcritical mass-flow regulation. A constant-area section was required ahead of the subsonic diffuser in order to obtain reasonable performance. An inlet-engine net-thrust analysis indicated that the optimum performance occurred with from 20- to 25-percent bleed, depending on how the bypassed air was handled

    Evaluation of five conical center-body supersonic diffusers at several angles of attack

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    Five supersonic inlets having conical center bodies were investigated in a 16-inch ram jet engine with and without combustion at Mach numbers of 1.7, 1.9, and 2.0 and angles of attack from 0 degrees to 10 degrees. Four of the inlets were of the low-mass-flow-ratio type whereas the fifth inlet was of the high-mass-flow-ratio type. The stable operating range of the four low-nass-flow-ratio inlets decreased considerably as the angle of attack was increased despite an increase of the cone angle or the use of boundary-layer bleed. The stable range of the high-mass-flow-ratio inlet increased considerably both at 0 degrees and at greater angles of attack as the free-stream Mach number was decreased. Free-stream Mach number, angle of attack, and inlet type had negligible effects on combustion efficiency, temperature ratio, or combustion-chamber inlet Mach number in the supercritical region

    Aerodynamic Characteristics of NACA RM-10 Missile in 8- by 6-foot Supersonic Wind Tunnel at Mach Numbers from 1.49 to 1.98 II : Presentation and Analysis of Force Measurements

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    Experimental investigation of aerodynamic forces acting on body of revolution (NACA RM-10 missile) with and without stabilizing fins was conducted at Mach numbers from 1.49 to 1.98 at angles of attack from 0 to 9 degrees and at Reynolds number of approximately 30,000,000. Comparison of experimental lift, drag, and pitching-moment coefficients and center of pressure location for body alone is made with linearized potential theory and a semiempirical method. Results indicate that aerodynamic characteristics were predicted more accurately by semiempirical method than by potential theory. Breakdown of measured drag coefficients into components of friction, pressure, and base-pressure drag is presented for body alone at zero angle of attack
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