Laminar mixing of a compressible fluid (open access)

Laminar mixing of a compressible fluid

From Summary: "A theoretical investigation of the velocity profiles for laminar mixing of a high-velocity stream with a region of fluid at rest has been made assuming that the Prandtl number is unity. A method which involves only quadratures is presented for calculating the velocity profile in the mixing layer for an arbitrary value of the free-stream Mach number. Detailed velocity profiles have been calculated for free-stream Mach numbers of 0, 1, 2, 3, and 5."
Date: January 5, 1949
Creator: Chapman, Dean R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Information Relating to Gust Loads on Airplanes (open access)

Summary of Information Relating to Gust Loads on Airplanes

"Available information on gust structure, airplane reactions, and pertinent operating statistics has been examined. This report attempts to coordinate this information with reference to the prediction of gust loads on airplanes. The material covered represents research up to October 1947" (p. 807).
Date: August 5, 1949
Creator: Donely, Philip
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-dimensional unsteady lift problems in supersonic flight (open access)

Two-dimensional unsteady lift problems in supersonic flight

The variation of pressure distribution is calculated for a two-dimensional supersonic airfoil either experiencing a sudden angle-of-attack change or entering a sharp-edge gust. From these pressure distributions the indicial lift functions applicable to unsteady lift problems are determined for two cases. Results are presented which permit the determination of maximum increment in lift coefficient attained by an unrestrained airfoil during its flight through a gust. As an application of these results, the minimum altitude for safe flight through a specific gust is calculated for a particular supersonic wing of given strength and wing loading.
Date: December 5, 1947
Creator: Heaslet, Max A. & Lomax, Harvard
System: The UNT Digital Library
A method for studying the hunting oscillations of an airplane with a simple type of automatic control (open access)

A method for studying the hunting oscillations of an airplane with a simple type of automatic control

"A method is presented for predicting the amplitude and frequency, under certain simplifying conditions, of the hunting oscillations of an automatically controlled aircraft with lag in the control system or in the response of the aircraft to the controls. If the steering device is actuated by a simple right-left type of signal, the series of alternating fixed-amplified signals occurring during the hunting may ordinarily be represented by a "square wave." Formulas are given expressing the response to such a variations of signal in terms of the response to a unit signal" (p. 487).
Date: May 5, 1944
Creator: Jones, Robert T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Stability of the Laminar Boundary Layer in a Compressible Fluid (open access)

The Stability of the Laminar Boundary Layer in a Compressible Fluid

The present paper is a continuation of a theoretical investigation of the stability of the laminar boundary layer in a compressible fluid. An approximate estimate for the minimum critical Reynolds number, or stability limit, is obtained in terms of the distribution of the kinematic viscosity and the product of the mean density and mean vorticity across the boundary layer. The extension of the results of the stability analysis to laminar boundary-layer gas flows with a pressure gradient in the direction of the free stream is discussed.
Date: September 5, 1946
Creator: Lees, Lester
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of stresses in gas-turbine disks subjected to plastic flow and creep (open access)

Determination of stresses in gas-turbine disks subjected to plastic flow and creep

A finite-difference method previously presented for computing elastic stresses in rotating disks is extended to include the computation of the disk stresses when plastic flow and creep are considered. A finite-difference method is employed to eliminate numerical integration and to permit nontechnical personnel to make the calculations with a minimum of engineering supervision. Illustrative examples are included to facilitate explanation of the procedure by carrying out the computations on a typical gas-turbine disk through a complete running cycle. The results of the numerical examples presented indicate that plastic flow markedly alters the elastic-stress distribution.
Date: March 5, 1948
Creator: Millenson, M. B. & Manson, S. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relation between spark-ignition engine knock, detonation waves, and autoignition as shown by high-speed photography (open access)

Relation between spark-ignition engine knock, detonation waves, and autoignition as shown by high-speed photography

"A critical review of literature bearing on the autoignition and detonation-wave theories of spark-ignition engine knock and on the nature of gas vibrations associated with combustion and knock results in the conclusion that neither the autoignition theory nor the detonation-wave theory is an adequate explanation of spark-ignition engine knock. A knock theory is proposed, combining the autoignition and detonation-wave theories, which introduces the idea that the detonation wave develops in autoignited or after-burning gases, and ascribes comparatively low-pitched heavy knocks to autoignition but high-pitched pinging knocks to detonation waves with the possibility of combinations of the two types of knocks" (p. 317).
Date: December 5, 1945
Creator: Miller, Cearcy D.
System: The UNT Digital Library