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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2019-08-15
    Description: A small total-pressure tube resting against a flat-plate surface was used as a Stanton tube and calibrated as a skin-friction meter at various subsonic and supersonic speeds. Laminar flow was maintained for the supersonic runs at a Mach number M(sub infinity) of 2. At speeds between M(sub infinity) = 1.33 and M(sub infinity) = 1.87, the calibrations were carried-out in a turbulent boundary layer. The subsonic flows were found to be in transition. The skin-friction readings of a floating-element type of balance served as the reference values against which the Stanton tube was calibrated. A theoretical model was developed which, for moderate values of the shear parameter tau, accurately predicts the performance of the Stanton tube in subsonic and supersonic flows. A "shear correction factor" was found to explain the deviations from the basic model when T became too large. Compressibility effects were important only in the case of turbulent supersonic flows, and they did not alter the form of the calibration curve. The test Reynolds numbers, based on the distance from the leading edge and free-stream conditions, ranged from 70,000 to 875,000. The turbulent-boundary-layer Reynolds numbers, based on momentum thickness, varied between 650 and 2,300. Both laminar and turbulent velocity profiles were taken and the effect of pressure gradient on the calibration was investigated.
    Keywords: Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer
    Type: NASA-MEMO-2-17-59W
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: The experimentally determined interaction effects of a side jet exhausting near the base of an ogive-cylinder model are presented and discussed. The interaction force appears to be independent of main-stream Mach number, boundary-layer condition (laminar or turbulent), angle of attack, and forebody length. The ratio of interaction force to jet force is found to be inversely proportional to the square root of the product of jet stagnation-to-free-stream pressure ratio and jet-to-body diameter ratio.
    Keywords: Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer
    Type: NASA-MEMO-12-5-58W
    Format: application/pdf
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