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  • Aerodynamics
  • Ertrag
  • Inorganic Chemistry
  • Temperatur
  • 2000-2004  (109)
  • 1920-1924
  • 2000  (109)
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Years
  • 2000-2004  (109)
  • 1920-1924
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  • 1
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    Unknown
    In:  Fiel Crops Research 67, p. 35-49
    Publication Date: 2000
    Description: Review über die wichtigsten biologischen Prozesse, die den Ertrag von Winterraps bestimmen. Beschreibung verschiedener Modelle KATASTER-BESCHREIBUNG: Einfluss der Temperatur auf das Pflanzenwachstum KATASTER-DETAIL: Delta T (Frühling) 〉 5°C, dann Beginn Wachstum
    Keywords: weltweit ; 1972-2000 ; Boden ; Ertrag ; Temperatur ; Raps ; Modell
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The use of balloons/aerobots on Mars has been under consideration for many years. Concepts include deployment during entry into the atmosphere from a carrier spacecraft, deployment from a lander, use of super-pressurized systems for long duration flights, 'hot-air' systems, etc. Principal advantages include the ability to obtain high-resolution data of the surface because balloons provide a low-altitude platform which moves relatively slowly. Work conducted within the last few years has removed many of the technical difficulties encountered in deployment and operation of balloons/aerobots on Mars. The concept proposed here (a tethered balloon released from a lander) uses a relatively simple approach which would enable aspects of Martian balloons to be tested while providing useful and potentially unique science results. Tethered Micro-Balloons on Mars (TMBM) would be carried to Mars on board a future lander as a stand-alone experiment having a total mass of one to two kilograms. It would consist of a helium balloon of up to 50 cubic meters that is inflated after landing and initially tethered to the lander. Its primary instrumentation would be a camera that would be carried to an altitude of up to tens of meters above the surface. Imaging data would be transmitted to the lander for inclusion in the mission data stream. The tether would be released in stages allowing different resolutions and coverage. In addition during this staged release a lander camera system may observe the motion of the balloon at various heights above he lander. Under some scenarios upon completion of the primary phase of TMBM operations, the tether would be cut, allowing TMBM to drift away from the landing site, during which images would be taken along the ground.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: Concepts and Approaches for Mars Exploration; Part 2; 285; LPI-Contrib-1062-Pt-2
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: In the early 1990's, Glezer and his co-workers at Georgia Tech made a startling discovery. They found that forcing at frequencies too high to directly affect the production scales led to a dramatic alteration in the development of a turbulent shear layer. An experimental study of this phenomenon is presented in Wiltse and Glezer. They used piezoelectric actuators located near the jet exit plane to force the shear layers of a square low-speed jet. The actuators were driven at a high frequency in the Kolmogorov inertial subrange, much higher than the frequencies associated with the large-scale motion (where the turbulent energy is produced and located) but much lower than those associated with the Kolmogorov scale (where the turbulent energy is dissipated). Measurements of the shear-layer turbulence showed that direct excitation of small-scale motion by high-frequency forcing led to an increase in the turbulent dissipation of more than an order of magnitude in the initial region of the shear layer! The turbulent dissipation gradually decreased with downstream distance but remained above the corresponding level for the unforced flow at all locations examined. The high-frequency forcing increased the turbulent kinetic energy in the initial region near the actuators, but the kinetic energy decreased quite rapidly with downstream distance, dropping to levels that were a small fraction of the level for the unforced case. Perhaps most importantly from the present standpoint, the high-frequency forcing significantly decreased the energy in the large-scale motion, increasingly so with downstream distance. Wiltse and Glezer interpreted this behavior as an enhanced transfer of energy from the large scales to the small scales. The initial work by Wiltse and Glezer has expanded into other applications. To explore the potential of high-frequency forcing for active acoustic suppression, in 1998 the first author proposed a set of experiments involving an edge tone shear layer and an open cavity flow. This work was funded by the US Air Force Research Laboratory, and the experiments were developed and executed at Boeing by Raman and Kibens. These experiments involved high-frequency forcing applied to low-speed flows using wedge piezo actuators and powered resonance tubes. The system is simple, open loop, compact, potentially requires little power, and is easily integrated. Dramatic results, such as reductions of 20 dB in spectral peaks and 5-8 dB in overall levels across the entire acoustic spectrum, were obtained in some cases. Sample results are presented. Following this success in low-speed flows, an international cooperative program continuing this work involved transonic experiments in a mid-size facility in the United Kingdom. Similar reductions in noise level were obtained in these transonic experiments. Discussion of this work is given in Raman et at. and Stanek, Raman, Kibens, and Ross. Other experiments at Georgia Tech have shown significant potential of high-frequency forcing in controlling reaction rates in chemically reacting flows.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: Annual Research Briefs - 2000: Center for Turbulence Research; 55-65
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: Efforts to reduce viscous drag on airfoils could results in a considerable saving for the operation of flight vehicles including those of space transportation. This reduction of viscous drag effort requires measurement and active control of boundary layer flow property on an airfoil. Measurement of viscous drag of the boundary layer flow over an airfoil with minimal flow disturbance is achievable with newly developed MEMS sensor clusters. These sensor clusters provide information that can be used to actively control actuators to obtain desired flow properties or design a vehicle to satisfy particular boundary layer flow criteria. A series of MEMS sensor clusters has been developed with a data acquisition and control module for local measurements of shear stress, pressure, and temperature on an airfoil. The sensor cluster consists of two shear stress sensors, two pressure sensors, and two temperature sensors on a surface area of 1.24 mm x 1.86 mm. Each sensor is 300 microns square and is placed on a flexible polyimide sheet. The shear stress sensor is a polysilicon hot-film resistor, which is insulated by a vacuum cavity of 200 x 200 x 2 microns. The pressure sensors are silicon piezoresistive type, and the temperature sensors are also hot film polysilicon resistors. The total size of the cluster including sensors and electrical leads is 1 Omm x 1 Omm x 0.1 mm. A typical sensitivity of shear stress sensor is 150 mV/Pascal, the pressure sensors are an absolute type with a measurement range from 9 to 36 psia with 0.8mV/V/psi sensitivity, and the temperature sensors have a measurement resolution of 0.1 degree C. The sensor clusters are interfaced to a data acquisition and control module that consists of two custom ASICs (Application Specific Integrated Circuits) and a micro-controller. The data acquisition and control module transfers data to a host PC that configures and controls a total of three sensor clusters. Functionality of the entire system has been tested in the laboratory, and preliminary test results are presented.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
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  • 5
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2017-10-04
    Description: This presentation reviews the three pillars and the associated goals of NASA's Aero-Space Technology Enterprise. The three pillars for success are: (1) Global Civil Aviation, (2) Revolutionary Technology Leaps, (3) Advanced Space Transportation. The associated goals of the first pillar are to reduce accidents, emissions, and cost, and to increase the aviation system capacity. The goals of the second pillar are to reduce transoceanic travel time, revolutionize general aviation aircraft, and improve development capacity. The goals associated with the third pillar are to reduce the launch cost for low earth orbit and to reduce travel time for planetary missions. In order to meet these goals NASA must provide next-generation design capability for new and or experimental craft which enable a balance between reducing components of the design cycle by up to 50% and or increasing the confidence in design by 50%. These next-generation design tools, concepts, and processes will revolutionize vehicle development. The presentation finally reviews the importance of modeling and simulation in achieving the goals.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Aeroelasticity is computationally one of the most intensive fields in aerospace engineering. Though over the last three decades the computational speed of supercomputers have substantially increased, they are still inadequate for large scale aeroelastic computations using high fidelity flow and structural equations. In addition to reaching a saturation in computational speed because of changes in economics, computer manufactures are stopping the manufacturing of mainframe type supercomputers. This has led computational aeroelasticians to face the gigantic task of finding alternate approaches for fulfilling their needs. The alternate path to over come speed and availability limitations of mainframe type supercomputers is to use parallel computers. During this decade several different architectures have evolved. In FY92 the US Government started the High Performance Computing and Communication (HPCC) program. As a participant in this program NASA developed several parallel computational tools for aeroelastic applications. This talk describes the impact of those application tools on high fidelity based multidisciplinary analysis.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: 7th International Conference on High Performance Computing; Dec 17, 2000 - Dec 20, 2000; Bangalore; India
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: In previous studies, a mixed finite element was derived and shown to be effective in facilitating accurate modal reduction of rotor blades. This study builds upon that earlier work through the development of algorithms that allow the element's Lagrangian axial displacement degrees of freedom to be eliminated in favor of the axial force degrees of freedom. This reduction process, which had been demonstrated previously for the case of a single mixed finite element, may be viewed as a generalization of the UMARC blade analysis methodology to arbitrary topologies. A unique strength of the method. developed here is that the model may consist of two dimensional or even three dimensional elements.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: AHS Aeromechanics Specialists'' Meeting; Nov 13, 2000 - Nov 15, 2000; Unknown
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Computational Fluid Dynamics based design methods are maturing to the point that they are beginning to be used in the aircraft design process. Many design methods however have demonstrated deficiencies in the leading edge region of airfoil sections. The objective of the present research is to develop an efficient inverse design method which is valid in the leading edge region. The new design method is a streamline curvature method, and a new technique is presented for modeling the variation of the streamline curvature normal to the surface. The new design method allows the surface coordinates to move normal to the surface, and has been incorporated into the Constrained Direct Iterative Surface Curvature (CDISC) design method. The accuracy and efficiency of the design method is demonstrated using both two-dimensional and three-dimensional design cases.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: AIAA Paper 2000-0780 , 38th Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit; Jan 10, 2000 - Jan 13, 2000; Reno, NV; United States
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A three-dimensional large eddy simulation model is used to investigate the sensitivity of ambient stratification with turbulence on the behavior of aircraft wake vortices. Modeled ambient turbulence levels range from very weak to moderate, and stratification levels range from strongly stable to unstable. The results of profound significance from this study are: 1) very little sensitivity between vortex linking time and the level of stratification, 2) the mean vortex separation remained nearly constant regardless of stratification and turbulence (at least prior to linking), 3) the wake vortices did not rise regardless of the level of stratification, and 4) for very strong stratification, the vortex stopped descending and quickly dissipated even before vortex linking could occur. These results are supported by experimental data and are contrary to conclusions from other numerical studies that assume laminar flow and/or relatively-low Reynolds numbers.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: AIAA Paper 2000-0755 , 38th Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit; Jan 10, 2000 - Jan 13, 2000; Reno, NV; United States
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Recent improvements in an unstructured-grid method for large-scale aerodynamic design are presented. Previous work had shown such computations to be prohibitively long in a sequential processing environment. Also, robust adjoint solutions and mesh movement procedures were difficult to realize, particularly for viscous flows. To overcome these limiting factors, a set of design codes based on a discrete adjoint method is extended to a multiprocessor environment using a shared memory approach. A nearly linear speedup is demonstrated, and the consistency of the linearizations is shown to remain valid. The full linearization of the residual is used to precondition the adjoint system, and a significantly improved convergence rate is obtained. A new mesh movement algorithm is implemented and several advantages over an existing technique are presented. Several design cases are shown for turbulent flows in two and three dimensions.
    Keywords: Aerodynamics
    Type: AIAA Paper 2001-0596 , 39th Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit; Jan 08, 2001 - Jan 11, 2001; Reno, NV; United States
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