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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A total of 186 methane measurements from the three primary Amazon floodplain environments of open water lakes, flood forests, and floating grass mats were made over the period 18 July through 2 September 1985. These data indicate that emissions were lowest over open water lakes. Flux from flooded forests and grass mats was significantly higher. At least three transport processes contribute to tropospheric emissions: ebullition from sediments, diffusion along the concentration gradient from sediment to overlaying water to air, and transport through the roots and stems of aquatic plants. Measurements indicate that the first two of these processes are most significant. It was estimated that on the average bubbling makes up 49% of the flux from open water, 54% of that from flooded forests, and 64% of that from floating mats. If the measurements were applied to the entire Amazonian floodplain, it is calculated that the region could supply up to 12% of the estimated global natural sources of methane.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: NASA-TM-89296 , NAS 1.15:89296
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A system for improving yaw control at low speeds consists of one strake placed on the upper portion of the fuselage facing the retreating rotor blade and another strake placed on the lower portion of the fuselage facing the advancing rotor blade. These strakes spoil the airflow on the helicopter tail boom during hover, low speed flight, and right or left sidewards flight so that less side thrust is required from the tail rotor.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT STABILITY AND CONTROL
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The improvement of the helicopter torque control system is discussed. At low to medium forward speeds helicopter performance is limited by the effectiveness of the means for counteracting main rotor torque and controlling sideslip airloads. These problems may be overcome by mounting strakes on the aft fuselage section. For single rotor helicopters whose main rotor rotates counter-clockwise as viewed from above, one of the strakes would be mounted in the upper lefthand quadrant and the second in the lower left hand quadrant. The strakes alter the air flow around the fuselage by separating the flow so as to produce lateral airloads on the tail boom which oppose main-rotor torque. The upper strake operates in a right crosswind to oppose main rotor torque, and the lower strake has effect in left crosswinds. The novelty of this invention resides in the simple and economical manner in which the helicopter tail boom may be modified by the addition of strakes in order to increase torque control, and reduce the need for supplemental mechanical means of torque control.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT STABILITY AND CONTROL
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The use of a strake or spoiler on a helicopter tail boom to beneficially change helicopter tail boom air loads was suggested in the United States in 1975. The anticipated benefits were a change of tail boom loads to reduce required tail rotor thrust and power and improve directional control. High tail boom air loads experienced by the YAH-64 and described in 1978 led to a wind tunnel investigation of the usefullness of strakes in altering such loads on the AH-64, UH-60, and UH-1 helicopters. The wind tunnel tests of 2-D cross sections of the tail boom of each demonstrated that a strake or strakes would be effective. Several limited test programs with the U.S. Army's OH-58A, AH-64, and UH-60A were conducted which showed the effects of strakes were modest for those helicopters. The most recent flight test program, with a Bell 204B, disclosed that for the 204B the tail boom strake or strakes would provide more than a modest improvement in directional control and reduction in tail rotor power.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT STABILITY AND CONTROL
    Type: NASA-TM-101496 , NAS 1.15:101496 , AVSCOM-TM-88-B-014 , International Conference on Helicopter Handling Qualities and Control; Nov 15, 1988 - Nov 17, 1988; London
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The sources of methane and its flux to the troposphere from the Amazonian floodplain were investigated during the dry season of July and August 1985, using measurements of methane concentration gradients obtained aboard a houseboat laboratory anchored in Lago Calado, a stratified dendritic lake of about 6-sq km area located near the center of the Amazon Basin. Methane concentrations in the mixed layer of the lake were found to vary from 0.0001 to 0.0055 mM, with no consistent temporal trend. The measured methane flux from the surface of the open lake to the atmosphere averaged 27 mg CH4/sq m per day, consistent with the buildup in ambient methane in the nocturnal surface mixed layer of the troposphere. Ebullition contributed 70 percent to the average total flux. The source of methane to the lake and, ultimately, to the troposphere is the benthic sediments.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 93; 1564-157
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: A total of 186 methane measurements from the three primary Amazon floodplain environments of open water lakes, flood forests, and floating grass mats were made over the period 18 July through 2 September 1985. These data indicate that emissions were lowest over open water lakes. Flux from flooded forests and grass mats was significantly higher. At least three transport processes contribute to tropospheric emissions: ebullition from sediments, diffusion along the concentration gradient from sediment to overlaying water to air, and transport through the roots and stems of aquatic plants. Measurements indicate that the first two of these processes are most significant. It was estimated that on the average bubbling makes up 49 percent of the flux from open water, 54 percent of that from flooded forests, and 64 percent of that from floating mats. If the measurements were applied to the entire Amazonian floodplain, it is calculated that the region could supply up to 12 percent of the estimated global natural sources of methane.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 93; 1571-158
    Format: text
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