The aerodynamics and acoustics of a generic coaxial helicopter with a stiff main rotor system and a tail-
mounted propulsor are investigated using Brown's Vorticity Transport Model. In particular, the model
is used to capture the aerodynamic interactions that arise between the various components of the configuration. By comparing the aerodynamics of the full configuration of the helicopter to the aerodynamics
of various combinations of its sub-components, the influence of these aerodynamic interactions on the behaviour of the system can be isolated. Many of the interactions follow a simple relationship between cause
and effect. For instance, ingestion of the main rotor wake produces a direct effect on the unsteadiness
in the thrust produced by the propulsor. The causal relationship for other interdependencies within the
system are found to be more obscure. For instance, a dependence of the acoustic signature of the aircraft
on the tailplane design originates in the changes in loading on the main rotor that arise from the requirement to trim the load on the tailplane that is induced by its interaction with the main rotor wake. The
traditional approach to the analysis of interactional effects on the performance of the helicopter relies on
characterising the system in terms of a network of possible interactions between the separate components of
its configuration. This approach, although conceptually appealing, may obscure the closed-loop nature of
some of the aerodynamic interactions within the helicopter system. It is suggested that modern numerical
simulation techniques may be ready to supplant any overt reliance on this reductionist type approach and
hence may help to forestall future repetition of the long history of unforeseen, interaction-induced dynamic
problems that have arisen in various new helicopter designs