Publication Date:
2019-08-15
Description:
An investigation has been conducted in the Langley 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel at a Mach number of 2.01 to determine the effects of forebody deflection on the stability and control characteristics of a canard airplane configuration. The configuration had a high trapezoidal aspect-ratio-3 wing, a trapezoidal canard surface, and a single swept vertical tail. Forebody deflection angles of 0 deg, 2 deg and deg were investigated. The results indicated that nose-up deflections of the forebody provided positive increments of pitching moment with little increase in drag and hence would be useful in reducing the pitch-control requirements and the attendant losses in lift-drag ratio due to trimming. Deflection of the forebody, however, aggravated the decrease in directional stability with increasing angle of attack by causing a loss in tail contribution and by increasing the instability of the wing-body combination.
Keywords:
Aircraft Stability and Control
Type:
NASA-MEMO-4-4-59L
Format:
application/pdf