Calorimetric Calibration of a Graphite Walled, Cavity-Type Ionization Chamber (open access)

Calorimetric Calibration of a Graphite Walled, Cavity-Type Ionization Chamber

Technical report outlining cavity-type ionization chambers with graphite walls that are used to measure heat dissipation in the graphite reflector of the MTR mock-up. Studies the relationship between the ionization occurring in the chamber and the heat generated in the surrounding graphite medium. [From Abstract]
Date: January 23, 1951
Creator: Jenks, G. H.; Breazeale, W. M. & Hairston, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies on the Removal of Radioisotopes From Liquid Wastes by Coagulation (open access)

Studies on the Removal of Radioisotopes From Liquid Wastes by Coagulation

Technical report covering work completed on the removal of radioisotopes from water using a calcium phosphate floc as a carrier. This research was performed as part of the Health Physics Waste Disposal Research Section work on the removal of small quantities of radioactivity from large volumes of water. [From Abstract]
Date: January 23, 1951
Creator: Lauderdale, Robert A., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Survey of Processing Methods for the Production of Thorium Metal from Monazite Sand and Thorium Nitrate (open access)

Survey of Processing Methods for the Production of Thorium Metal from Monazite Sand and Thorium Nitrate

Cost estimates for two types of Th producing plants are offered. One utilizes Th(NO3)4 as raw material, the other uses monazite sand. Final processing schemes and plant designs are not fixed, so the estimates represent maximum costs. Recommendations for research and development of Th producing methods are given.
Date: April 23, 1951
Creator: Bulkowski, H. Harold & Maerker, John B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Apparatus for obtaining a supersonic flow of very short duration and some drag measurements obtained with its use (open access)

Apparatus for obtaining a supersonic flow of very short duration and some drag measurements obtained with its use

From Introduction: "The auxiliary apparatus described in this paper was constructed to meet this need and has been developed to a point where satisfactory measurements of relative drag can be obtained. In this paper, the apparatus is described and some comparisons are made between the results obtained with this apparatus and the measurements of free-fall, rocket, and supersonic-tunnel techniques."
Date: July 23, 1951
Creator: Yeates, John E., Jr.; Bailey, F. J., Jr. & Voglewede, T. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of double-slotted flaps and leading-edge modifications on the low-speed characteristics of a large-scale 45 degrees swept-back wing with and without camber and twist (open access)

Effects of double-slotted flaps and leading-edge modifications on the low-speed characteristics of a large-scale 45 degrees swept-back wing with and without camber and twist

Report presenting an investigation of two large-scale, semispan, wing-fuselage models with the 0.25-chord line swept back 45 degrees to determine and compare the effects of partial-span, double-slotted flaps on the characteristics of a 45 degree sweptback wing with and without camber and twist. A secondary investigation was also conducted to determine the effects of various full-span, leading-edge modifications on the characteristics of the models with and without the flaps.
Date: July 23, 1951
Creator: James, Harry A. & Dew, Joseph K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large-scale flight measurements of zero-lift drag at Mach numbers from 0.8 to 1.6 of a wing-body combination having an unswept 4.5 percent thick wing with modified hexagonal sections (open access)

Large-scale flight measurements of zero-lift drag at Mach numbers from 0.8 to 1.6 of a wing-body combination having an unswept 4.5 percent thick wing with modified hexagonal sections

Report presenting an investigation of zero-lift drag of a fin-stabilized wing-body combination from high-subsonic to supersonic speeds in a range of Reynolds numbers. The wing was unswept about the 74.5-percent-chord line, an aspect ratio of 3.04, a taper ratio of 0.394, and 4.5-percent-thick modified hexagonal airfoil sections. Results regarding total drag, wing-plus-interference drag, and base pressure are provided.
Date: March 23, 1951
Creator: Schult, Eugene D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests in the Ames 40- by 80-foot wind tunnel of an airplane configuration with an aspect ratio 2 triangular wing and an all-movable horizontal tail: longitudinal characteristics (open access)

Tests in the Ames 40- by 80-foot wind tunnel of an airplane configuration with an aspect ratio 2 triangular wing and an all-movable horizontal tail: longitudinal characteristics

Report presenting an investigation to determine the effect of an all-movable horizontal tail on the low-speed longitudinal characteristics of a triangular-wing airplane. The model consisted of a triangular wing of aspect ratio 2, a fuselage of fineness ratio 12.5, a thin, triangular, vertical tail, and a thin, unswept, all-movable horizontal tail.
Date: April 23, 1951
Creator: Graham, David & Koenig, David G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The properties of three cast polyester resins of Sierracin 212, 212A, and 250A (open access)

The properties of three cast polyester resins of Sierracin 212, 212A, and 250A

From Summary: "Physical properties of samples of three cast polyester resins known as Sierracin resins were investigated. Tests were made to determine specific gravity, index of refraction, Rockwell hardness, Tukon indentation hardness, effect of exposure to accelerated and outdoor weathering, Munsell color, resistance to accelerated service tests, crazing resistance under stress, flexural strength, Izod impact strength, and Taber abrasion resistance. Tables of the values obtained for these physical properties are included in the report."
Date: April 23, 1951
Creator: Kline, G. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effects of Mach number and Reynolds number on the aerodynamic characteristics of several 12-percent-thick wings having 35 degrees of sweepback and various amounts of camber (open access)

The effects of Mach number and Reynolds number on the aerodynamic characteristics of several 12-percent-thick wings having 35 degrees of sweepback and various amounts of camber

Report presenting a comparison of the lift, drag, and pitching-moment characteristics of several wings with 35 degrees of sweepback and various amounts of camber in wind-tunnel testing. Six semispan model wings were tested, three with an aspect ratio of 10 and three with an aspect ratio of 5. Results regarding model distortion under aerodynamic loads, effects of Reynolds number, effects of Mach number, and effects of camber are provided.
Date: February 23, 1951
Creator: Tinling, Bruce E. & Kolk, W. Richard
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drag interference between a pointed cylindrical body and triangular wings of various aspect ratios at Mach numbers of 1.50 and 2.02 (open access)

Drag interference between a pointed cylindrical body and triangular wings of various aspect ratios at Mach numbers of 1.50 and 2.02

The drag of a body alone, six triangular wings of various aspect ratios, and the combinations were measured at Mach numbers of 1.50 and 2.02 at a Reynolds number of 5.5 million (based on the body length). The experimental drag-interference results were in accordance with calculations based on NACA RM A9E19, 1949, with skin-friction effects taken into account, the interference effect being principally the result of fixing transition on the body by adding a wing.
Date: May 23, 1951
Creator: Katzen, Elliott D. & Kaattari, George E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altitude-ignition limit of a turbojet engine using a condenser-discharge ignition system (open access)

Altitude-ignition limit of a turbojet engine using a condenser-discharge ignition system

The altitude-ignition limits of a condenser-discharge ignition system installed on a turbojet engine were determined at a flight Mach number of 0.6 using 1.1-pound Reid vapor pressure fuel. Ignition was possible up to an altitude of 55,000 feet with 4.8 joules per spark and 6 sparks per second.
Date: October 23, 1951
Creator: Armstrong, John C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-dimensional cascade investigation of the maximum exit tangential velocity component and other flow conditions at the exit of several turbine blade designs at supercritical pressure ratios (open access)

Two-dimensional cascade investigation of the maximum exit tangential velocity component and other flow conditions at the exit of several turbine blade designs at supercritical pressure ratios

The nature of the flow at the exit of a row of turbine blades for the range of conditions represented by four different blade configurations was evaluated by the conservation-of-momentum principle using static-pressure surveys and by analysis of Schlieren photographs of the flow. It was found that for blades of the type investigated, the maximum exit tangential-velocity component is a function of the blade geometry only and can be accurately predicted by the method of characteristics. A maximum value of exit velocity coefficient is obtained at a pressure ratio immediately below that required for maximum blade loading followed by a sharp drop after maximum blade loading occurs.
Date: August 23, 1951
Creator: Hauser, Cavour H. & Plohr, Henry W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic stability and control characteristics of a vertically rising airplane model in hovering flight (open access)

Dynamic stability and control characteristics of a vertically rising airplane model in hovering flight

Report presenting an investigation to determine the stability and control characteristics of a vertically rising airplane model. Results of preliminary hovering flight tests are made in still air, away from the interference effects of the ground and side walls, and with normal airplane-type controls operating in the slipstream.
Date: February 23, 1951
Creator: Bates, William R.; Lovell, Powell M., Jr. & Smith, Charles C., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Zero-Lift Drags Determined by Flight Tests at Transonic Speeds of Symmetrically Mounted Nacelles in Various Spanwise Positions on a 45 Degrees Sweptback Wing and Body Combination (open access)

Comparison of Zero-Lift Drags Determined by Flight Tests at Transonic Speeds of Symmetrically Mounted Nacelles in Various Spanwise Positions on a 45 Degrees Sweptback Wing and Body Combination

Report presenting testing of rocket-powered models flown at transonic speeds to determine the effect of nacelle location on zero-lift drag. Low drag was obtained between M = 0.80 and M = 0.91 for all the nacelle positions investigated. Nacelles located at the wing tips gave the lowest drag, which was less than the drag of the combination without the nacelles over most of the speed range.
Date: May 23, 1951
Creator: Pepper, William B., Jr. & Hoffman, Sherwood
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of some recent data on buffet boundaries (open access)

Review of some recent data on buffet boundaries

Report presenting a study of a large amount of data pertaining to high-speed buffet boundaries of various airplane configurations. The data indicate a strong influence of wing configuration on buffet boundaries. Results regarding low-lift buffeting, high-lift buffeting, buffet boundaries, and buffet intensity are provided.
Date: May 23, 1951
Creator: Purser, Paul E. & Wyss, John A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recommendations for Wagon Drilling, Temple Mountain District, Utah [#2] (open access)

Recommendations for Wagon Drilling, Temple Mountain District, Utah [#2]

Discussing recommendations for wagon drilling in the Temple Mountain District, Utah
Date: April 23, 1951
Creator: Sheridan, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recommendations for Wagon Drilling, Temple Mountain District, Utah (open access)

Recommendations for Wagon Drilling, Temple Mountain District, Utah

This report describes the Temple Mountain district in Utah, specifically four Shinarump-capped areas that are recommended for ore mining.
Date: April 23, 1951
Creator: Sheridan, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gamma-Ray Transmission Through Finite Slabs - Part 1 (open access)

Gamma-Ray Transmission Through Finite Slabs - Part 1

This report is part one of a series of two parts to a memorandum. The work discussed here presents the results of extensive calculations on the attention of gamma rays by shields of lead and iron.
Date: July 23, 1951
Creator: Peebles, Glenn Harold
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Speed Investigation of a Semisubmerged Air Scoop With and Without Boundary-Layer Suction (open access)

Low-Speed Investigation of a Semisubmerged Air Scoop With and Without Boundary-Layer Suction

"A preliminary low-speed investigation has been made of an air scoop submerged one-half the inlet height in a depression on the surface of a simulated fuselage. Boundary-layer suction was used on the steep approach ramp to improve the internal flow. A 6-degree-included-angle diffuser with an area ratio of 1.9:1 was located behind the inlet in the model. Most of the tests were conducted with an initial turbulent boundary layer believed to approximate that which would occur on the forward part of a fuselage" (p. 1).
Date: February 23, 1951
Creator: Pierpont, P. Kenneth & Howell, Robert R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Flying-Boat Hull Having a Length-Beam Ratio of 15, TED No. NACA 2206 (open access)

Aerodynamic Characteristics of a Flying-Boat Hull Having a Length-Beam Ratio of 15, TED No. NACA 2206

"An investigation was made in the Langley 300 MPH 7- by 10-foot tunnel to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of a flying-boat hull of a length-beam ratio of 15 in the presence of a wing. The investigation was an extension of previous tests made on hulls of length-beam ratios of 6, 9, and 12; these hulls were designed to have approximately the same hydrodynamic performance with respect to spray and resistance characteristics. Comparison with the previous investigation at lower length-beam ratios indicated a reduction in minimum drag coefficients of 0.0006 (10 percent) with fixed transition when the length-beam ratio was extended from 12 to 15" (p. 1).
Date: January 23, 1951
Creator: Riebe, John M. & Naeseth, Rodger L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relation of engine turbine-blade life to stress-rupture properties of the alloys, Stellite 21, Hastelloy B, Cast S-816, Forged S-816, X-40, Nimonic 80, Refractory 26, N-155, and Iconel X (open access)

Relation of engine turbine-blade life to stress-rupture properties of the alloys, Stellite 21, Hastelloy B, Cast S-816, Forged S-816, X-40, Nimonic 80, Refractory 26, N-155, and Iconel X

An investigation was conducted to relate the engine performance of the heat-resistant alloys, Stellite 21, Hastelloy B, cast S-816, forged S-816, X-40, Nimonic 80, Refractory 26, N-155, and Iconel X to their stress-rupture properties. The engine test consisted of the repetition of a 20-minute cycle, 15 minutes at rated speed and approximately 5 minutes at idle. The results of the investigation indicated a direct correlation between stress-rupture life and blade life for the relatively low-strength alloys. The stress-rupture life and blade life for the relatively high-strength alloys did not correlate because of the effects of the vibratory stresses and the corrosive-gas atmosphere.
Date: August 23, 1951
Creator: Garrett, F. B. & Yaker, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Yawed-Landing Investigation of a Model of the Convair Y2-2 Airplane, TED No. NACA DE 363 (open access)

Yawed-Landing Investigation of a Model of the Convair Y2-2 Airplane, TED No. NACA DE 363

"A model of the Convair Y2-2 airplane was tested in Langley tank no. 2 to determine whether satisfactory stability in yawed landings was possible with a certain ventral fin. Free-body landings were made in smooth and rough water at two speeds and two rates of descent with the model yawed 15 degrees. The behavior of the model was determined by visual observations and from motion-picture records" (p. 1).
Date: August 23, 1951
Creator: Hoffman, Edward L. & Fisher, Lloyd J.
System: The UNT Digital Library