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  • General Chemistry  (524)
  • Aerodynamics  (53)
  • 550 - Earth sciences
  • Fisheries
  • 1960-1964  (577)
  • 1960  (577)
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  • 1960-1964  (577)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: An exploratory investigation has been made in the Langley 300 MPH 7 by 10 foot tunnel to study the low-speed static longitudinal and lateral stability characteristics of a reentry configuration having rigid retractable conical lifting surfaces that unfolded from the surface of a conical fuselage. The model also had curved tail surfaces that unfolded from a cylindrical aft section attached to the cone. Longitudinal tests were made through an angle-of-attack range from -4 deg to 90 deg and limited lateral tests were made through an angle-of-sideslip range from -12 deg to 32 deg at an angle of attack of 0 deg. The tail surface provided longitudinal trim to maximum lift and beyond and up to an angle of attack of 51 deg for a center-of-moment location of 42.9 percent mean aerodynamic chord. For this center-of-moment position the model had a static margin of 12 percent mean aerodynamic chord at the lower lift coefficients and was longitudinally stable up to a lift coefficient between 1.0 and 1.2. Neutral stability occurred from lift coefficient of 1.0 up to near maximum lift coefficient. The maximum value of trimmed lift-drag ratio was 4.85 at a lift coefficient of approximately 0.3 and a trimmed angle of attack of approximately 10 deg. The configuration was directionally stable throughout the test angle of sideslip range for an angle of attack of 0 deg.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-622 , L-1180
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: This report describes a technique which combines theory and experiments for determining relaxation times in gases. The technique is based on the measurement of shapes of the bow shock waves of low-fineness-ratio cones fired from high-velocity guns. The theory presented in the report provides a means by which shadowgraph data showing the bow waves can be analyzed so as to furnish effective relaxation times. Relaxation times in air were obtained by this technique and the results have been compared with values estimated from shock tube measurements in pure oxygen and nitrogen. The tests were made at velocities ranging from 4600 to 12,000 feet per second corresponding to equilibrium temperatures from 35900 R (19900 K) to 6200 R (34400 K), under which conditions, at all but the highest temperatures, the effective relaxation times were determined primarily by the relaxation time for oxygen and nitrogen vibrations.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-327
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: A wind-tunnel investigation has been made to study the static longitudinal and lateral stability characteristics of a simplified aerial vehicle supported by ducted fans that tilt relative to the airframe. The ducts were in a triangular arrangement with one duct in front and two at the rear in order to minimize the influence of the downwash of the front duct on the rear ducts. The results of the investigation were compared with those of a similar investigation for a tandem two-duct arrangement in which the ducts were fixed (rather than tiltable) relative to the airframe, since the three-duct configuration had been devised in an attempt to avoid some of the deficiencies of the tandem fixed-duct configuration. The results of the investigation indicated that the tilting-duct arrangement had less noseup pitching moment for a given forward speed than the tandem fixed-duct arrangement. The model had less angle-of-attack instability than the tandem fixed-duct arrangement. The model was directionally unstable but had a positive dihedral effect throughout the test speed range.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-409 , L-961
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: An investigation was made at high subsonic speeds in the Langley high-speed 7- by 10-foot tunnel to determine the effect of end plates on the longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics of a sweptback wing-body combination with and without drooped chord-extensions. The wing had 45 deg sweepback of the quarter-chord line, an aspect ratio of 4, a taper ratio of 0.3, and NACA 65AO06 airfoil sections parallel to the plane of symmetry, and was mounted near the rear of a body of revolution having a fineness ratio of approximately 8. The results indicated that the addition of the end plates to either the wing with drooped chord-extensions or to the wing without drooped chord-extensions slightly increased the lift in the low angle-of-attack range but slightly decreased the lift at moderate and high angles of attack. The addition of the end plates to the wing without the chord-extensions caused a small increase in the maximum lift-drag ratio at Mach numbers below 0.65 and a slight decrease at the higher Mach numbers; however, for the addition of the end plates to the wing with the chord- extensions the maximum lift-drag ratio was slightly decreased below a Mach number of 0.88, while a slight increase occurred for the higher Mach numbers. The addition of the end plates to the wings with and without the chord-extensions caused the static longitudinal stability to increase considerably for all Mach numbers; however, only a slight reduction in the aerodynamic-center variation with Mach number was observed.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-389 , L-834
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The experimental wave drags of bodies and wing-body combinations over a wide range of Mach numbers are compared with the computed drags utilizing a 24-term Fourier series application of the supersonic area rule and with the results of equivalent-body tests. The results indicate that the equivalent-body technique provides a good method for predicting the wave drag of certain wing-body combinations at and below a Mach number of 1. At Mach numbers greater than 1, the equivalent-body wave drags can be misleading. The wave drags computed using the supersonic area rule are shown to be in best agreement with the experimental results for configurations employing the thinnest wings. The wave drags for the bodies of revolution presented in this report are predicted to a greater degree of accuracy by using the frontal projections of oblique areas than by using normal areas. A rapid method of computing wing area distributions and area-distribution slopes is given in an appendix.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-446 , L-1000
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: A flight investigation has been conducted to study the heat transfer to swept-wing leading edges. A rocket-powered model was used for the investigation and provided data for Mach number ranges of 1.78 to 2.99 and 2.50 to 4.05 with corresponding free-stream Reynolds number per foot ranges of 13.32 x 10(exp 6) to 19.90 x 10(exp 6) and 2.85 x 10(exp 6) to 4.55 x 10(exp 6). The leading edges employed were cylindrically blunted wedges ', three of which were swept 450 with leading-edge diameters of 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 inch and one swept 36-750 with a leading-edge diameter of 1/2 inch. In the high Reynolds number range, measured values of heat transfer were found to be much higher than those predicted by laminar theory and at the larger values of leading-edge diameter were approaching the values predicted by turbulent theory. For the low Reynolds number range a comparison between measured and theoretical heat transfer showed that increasing the leading-edge diameter resulted in turbulent flow on the cylindrical portion of the leading edge.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TM-X-208
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The shock-wave patterns of a complex configuration with cranked cruciform wings and a cone-cylinder body were examined to determine the interaction of the body bow wave with the flow field about the wing. Also of interest, was the interaction of the forward (760 sweptback) wing leading-edge wave with the rear (600 sweptback) wing leading-edge wave. The shadowgraph pictures of the model in free flight at a Mach number of 4.9, although not definitive, appear to indicate that the body bow wave crosses the outer wing panel after first being refracted either by the leading-edge wave of the 600 sweptback wing or by pressure fields in the flow crossing the wing.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-346 , A-433
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Experimental results are presented for an exploratory investigation of the effectiveness of interference between jet and afterbody in reducing the axial force on an afterbody with a neighboring jet. In addition to the interference axial force., measurements are presented of the interference normal force and the center of pressure of the interference normal force. The free-stream Mach number was 2.94, the jet-exit Mach number was 2.71, and the Reynolds number was 0.25 x 10, based on body diameter. The variables investigated include static-pressure ratio of the jet (up to 9), nacelle position relative to afterbody, angle of attack (-5 deg to 10 deg), and afterbody shape. Two families of afterbody shapes were tested. One family consisted of tangent-ogive bodies of revolution with varying length and base areas. The other family was formed by taking a planar slice off a circular cylinder with varying angle between the plane and cylinder. The trends with these variables are shown for conditions near maximum jet-afterbody interference. The interference axial forces are large and favorable. For several configurations the total afterbody axial force is reduced to zero by the interference.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-332
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: A wind-tunnel investigation was conducted to determine the effect of trailing-edge flaps with blowing-type boundary-layer control and leading-edge slats on the low-speed performance of a large-scale jet transport model with four engines and a 35 deg. sweptback wing of aspect ratio 7. Two spanwise extents and several deflections of the trailing-edge flap were tested. Results were obtained with a normal leading-edge and with full-span leading-edge slats. Three-component longitudinal force and moment data and boundary-layer-control flow requirements are presented. The test results are analyzed in terms of possible improvements in low-speed performance. The effect on performance of the source of boundary-layer-control air flow is considered in the analysis.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TN-D-333 , A-340
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: This investigation is a continuation of the experimental and theoretical evaluation of the effects of wing plan-form variations on the aerodynamic performance characteristics of blended wing-body combinations. The present report compares previously tested straight-edged delta and arrow models which have leading-edge sweeps of 59.04 and 70-82 deg., respectively, with related models which have plan forms with curved leading and trailing edges designed to result in the same average sweeps in each case. All the models were symmetrical, without camber, and were generally similar having the same span, length, and aspect ratios. The wing sections had an average value of maximum thickness ratio of about 4 percent of the local wing chords in a streamwise direction. The wing sections were computed by varying their shapes along with the body radii (blending process) to match the selected area distribution and the given plan form. The models were tested with transition fixed at Reynolds numbers of roughly 4,000,000 to 9,000,000, based on the mean aerodynamic chord of the wing. The characteristic effect of the wing curvature of the delta and arrow models was an increase at subsonic and transonic speeds in the lift-curve slopes which was partially reflected in increased maximum lift-drag ratios. Curved edges were not evaluated on a diamond plan form because a preliminary investigation indicated that the curvature considered would increase the supersonic zero-lift wave drag. However, after the test program was completed, a suitable modification for the diamond plan form was discovered. The analysis presented in the appendix indicates that large reductions in the zero-lift wave drag would be obtained at supersonic Mach numbers if the leading- and trailing-edge sweeps are made to differ by indenting the trailing edge and extending the root of the leading edge.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: NASA-TM-X-379
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