Resource Type

Laboratory Report on the Investigation of the Flow Around Two Turbine-Blade Profiles Using the Interferometer Method (open access)

Laboratory Report on the Investigation of the Flow Around Two Turbine-Blade Profiles Using the Interferometer Method

"At the request of the Junkers Aircraft and Engine Construction Company, Engine Division, Dessau Main Plant, an investigation was made using the interferometer method on the two turbine-blade profiles submitted. The interferometer method enables making visible the differences in density and consequently the boundary layers that develop when a flow is directed on the profile. Recognition of the points on the profile at which separation of flow occurs is thus possible" (p. 1).
Date: July 1947
Creator: von Vietinghoff-Scheel, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytical Treatment of Normal Condensation Shock (open access)

Analytical Treatment of Normal Condensation Shock

"The condensation of water vapor in an air has the following consequences: acquisition of heat (liberated heat vaporization; loss of mass on the part of the flowing gas (water vapor is converted to liquid); change in the specific gas constants and of the ratio k of the specific heats (caused by change of gas composition). A discontinuous change of state is therefore connected with the condensation; schlieren photographs of supersonic flows in two-dimensional Laval nozzles show two intersecting oblique shock fronts that in the case of high humidities may merge near the point of intersection into one normal shock front" (p. 1).
Date: July 1947
Creator: Heybey
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure-Distribution Measurements on Unyawed Swept-Back Wings (open access)

Pressure-Distribution Measurements on Unyawed Swept-Back Wings

"This report presents comprehensive pressure-distribution measurements on four (4) swept-back wings (phi = 0 deg, 15 deg, 30 deg, and 45 deg) of constant chord and over a large range of angles of attack with symmetrical air flow. The distributions, experimentally obtained, were compared with theoretical ones calculated by the methods of Weissinger and Multhopp" (p. 1).
Date: July 1947
Creator: Jacobs, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of the Pressure Distribution on Bodies of Revolution in the Subsonic Flow of a Gas Part 1 - Axially Symmetrical Flow (open access)

Calculation of the Pressure Distribution on Bodies of Revolution in the Subsonic Flow of a Gas Part 1 - Axially Symmetrical Flow

"The present report concerns a method of computing the velocity and pressure distributions on bodies of revolution in axially symmetrical flow in the subsonic range. The differential equation for the velocity potential Phi of a compressible fluid motion is linearized tn the conventional manner, and then put in the form Delta(Phi) = 0 by affine transformation. The quantity Phi represents the velocity potential of a fictitious incompressible flow, for which a constant superposition of sources by sections is secured by a method patterned after von Karman which must comply with the boundary condition delta(phi)/delta(n) = 0 at the originally specified contour" (p. 1).
Date: July 1947
Creator: Bilharz, Herbert & Hölder, Ernst
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of an 0.08-Scale Model of the Chance Vought XF7U-1 Airplane in the Langley High-Speed 7- by 10-Foot Tunnel: Part I - Basic Longitudinal Stability Characteristics, TED No. NACA DE308, Part 1, Basic Longitudinal Stability Characteristics, TED No. NACA DE308 (open access)

An Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of an 0.08-Scale Model of the Chance Vought XF7U-1 Airplane in the Langley High-Speed 7- by 10-Foot Tunnel: Part I - Basic Longitudinal Stability Characteristics, TED No. NACA DE308, Part 1, Basic Longitudinal Stability Characteristics, TED No. NACA DE308

The stability and control characteristics of an 0.08-scale model of the Chance Vought XF7U-1 airplane have been investigated over a Mach number range from 0.40 to 0.91. Results of the basic longitudinal tests of the complete model with undeflected control surfaces are given in the present report with a very limited analysis of the results.
Date: July 18, 1947
Creator: Kemp, William B., Jr.; Kuhn, Richard E. & Goodson, Kenneth W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Theory of the Unsteady Motion of an Airfoil (open access)

On the Theory of the Unsteady Motion of an Airfoil

"The paper presents a systematical analysis of the problem of the determination of the unsteady motion about an airfoil moving in an infinite fluid that contains a system of vortices and the determination of the hydrodynamical forces acting on the airfoil. The hydrodynamical problem is reduced to the determination of the function f (xi) which transforms conformally the external region of the airfoil into the interior of a circle. The proposed methods of determining the irrotational motion of a fluid that is produced by any motion of the airfoil are especially simple and effective if the function f (xi) is rational" (p. 1).
Date: July 1947
Creator: Sedov, L. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the I-40 Jet-Propulsion Engine in the Cleveland Altitude Wind Tunnel. V - Operational Characteristics, 5, Operational Characteristics (open access)

Investigation of the I-40 Jet-Propulsion Engine in the Cleveland Altitude Wind Tunnel. V - Operational Characteristics, 5, Operational Characteristics

An investigation has been conducted in the Cleveland altitude wind tunnel to determine the operational characteristics of the I-40 jet-propulsion engine over a range of pressure altitudes from 10,000 to 50,000 feet and ram-pressure ratios from 1.00 to 1.76. Engine operational data were obtained with the engine in the standard configuration and with various modifications of the fuel system, the electrical system, and the combustion chambers. The effects of altitude and airspeed on operating speed range, starting, windmilling, acceleration, speed regulation, cooling, and vibration of the standard and modified engines were determined, and damage to parts was noted.
Date: July 11, 1947
Creator: Golladay, Richard L. & Gendler, Stanley L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A unified theory of plastic buckling of columns and plates (open access)

A unified theory of plastic buckling of columns and plates

On the basis of modern plasticity considerations, a unified theory of plastic buckling applicable to both columns and plates has been developed. For uniform compression, the theory shows that long columns which bend without appreciable twisting require the tangent modulus and that long flanges which twist without appreciable bending require the secant modulus. Structures that both bend and twist when they buckle require a modulus which is a combination of the secant modulus and the tangent modulus.
Date: July 29, 1947
Creator: Stowell, Elbridge Z.
System: The UNT Digital Library