Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of the NACA RM-10 Missile (With Fins) at a Mach Number of 1.62 in the Langley 9-Inch Supersonic Tunnel (open access)

Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of the NACA RM-10 Missile (With Fins) at a Mach Number of 1.62 in the Langley 9-Inch Supersonic Tunnel

Report presenting an investigation of a fin-stabilized scale model of the NACA RM-10 missile at a Mach number of 1.62. Measurements were made of the lift, drag, and pitching moment of the finned body over a range of angles of attack. Comparisons with the results from other testing facilities are also provided.
Date: December 19, 1952
Creator: Coletti, Donald E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An experimental study of five annular air inlet configurations at subsonic and transonic speeds (open access)

An experimental study of five annular air inlet configurations at subsonic and transonic speeds

Report presenting an investigation of an NACA 1-80-100 nose inlet fitted alternately with an elliptical, a parabolic, a 14 degree-inch conical, and a 22 degree-inch conical central body at subsonic and transonic speeds in the 8-foot transonic tunnel. Drag, surface-pressure, and pressure-recovery measurements were obtained at 0 degrees angle of attack through a range of Mach numbers. Results regarding tunnel boundary interference, surface-pressure distribution, external drag, pressure recovery, and propulsive thrust comparison are provided.
Date: August 19, 1953
Creator: Pendley, Robert E.; Milillo, Joseph R.; Fleming, Frank F. & Bryan, Carroll R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altitude chamber evaluation of an aircraft liquid hydrogen fuel system used with a turbojet engine (open access)

Altitude chamber evaluation of an aircraft liquid hydrogen fuel system used with a turbojet engine

From Introduction: "The objective of this report are (1) to describe the complete fuel system, (2) to discuss the procedure used for transitions between JP-4 fuel and hydrogen, and (3) to present and discuss engine performance obtained with both fuels, and (4) to review the reliability of the fuel system."
Date: August 19, 1957
Creator: Braithwaite, Willis M.; Fenn, David B. & Algranti, Joseph S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and performance of flight-type liquid-hydrogen heat exchanger (open access)

Design and performance of flight-type liquid-hydrogen heat exchanger

Report presenting an investigation of a liquid-hydrogen fuel system developed to operate one of the turbojet engines in a twin-engine light bomber at an altitude of 50,000 feet and Mach number 0.75. The heat exchanger was evaluated in an altitude test chamber in conjunction with the complete aircraft fuel system. Results regarding calculated heat-exchanger performance, experimental heat-exchanger performance, and reliability are provided.
Date: August 19, 1957
Creator: Fenn, David B.; Braithwaite, Willis M. & Ordin, Paul M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and Performance of Fuel Control for Aircraft Hydrogen Fuel System (open access)

Design and Performance of Fuel Control for Aircraft Hydrogen Fuel System

Memorandum presenting the system analysis, design, and performance of a control system for an experimental flight-type hydrogen fuel system. The fuel system was designed to investigate some of the problems associated with the utilization of hydrogen as an aircraft fuel. Speed control of the engine was obtained by coupling the hydrogen regulator to the JP-4 fuel control.
Date: August 19, 1957
Creator: Otto, Edward W.; Hiller, Kirby W. & Ross, Phil S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Investigation of a Liquid Hydrogen Fuel System (open access)

Flight Investigation of a Liquid Hydrogen Fuel System

Memorandum presenting testing of a twin-engine light bomber modified to utilize hydrogen fuel in one of the two engines during flight at an altitude of 50,000 feet. Three completely successful flights were made using hydrogen fuel. Data are presented to show the effect of tank agitation on fuel pressure and fuel losses.
Date: August 19, 1957
Creator: Mulholland, Donald R.; Acker, Loren W.; Christenson, Harold H. & Gough, William V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic heating of rocket-powered research vehicles at hypersonic speeds (open access)

Aerodynamic heating of rocket-powered research vehicles at hypersonic speeds

From Introduction: "The purpose of this paper is to present and discuss skin temperature measurements from two flight tests. Temperature measurements were obtained to a Mach number of 5.4 on the first flight and to a Mach number of 10.4 on the second flight."
Date: July 19, 1955
Creator: Piland, Robert O. & Collie, Katherine A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Effects of Fluid in Pylon-Mounted Tanks on Flutter (open access)

Some Effects of Fluid in Pylon-Mounted Tanks on Flutter

Report presenting fluid-dynamics studies of a tank of fineness ratio 7.0 which was pylon mounted on a simplified two-dimensional flutter model in order to determine the effects of the fluid on flutter. The flutter speed was determined for three cases: with various amounts of water in the tank, with weights with the same mass and moment of inertia as the fluid considered to be a frozen solid, and with weights with the same mass and moment of inertia as the actual fluid. Results regarding the flutter speed, effects of inertia on flutter, and amplitude of flutter are provided.
Date: July 19, 1955
Creator: Reese, James R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rocket-engine throttling (open access)

Rocket-engine throttling

An investigation of the performance and operating characteristics of two variable-thrust injectors over a wide thrust range using mixed oxides of nitrogen and ammonia. Specific impulse, characteristic velocity, thrust coefficient, and overall efficiency are presented as functions of thrust. A maximum thrust range of 12 during one run was obtained with a triplet impinging-jet injector.
Date: December 19, 1955
Creator: Tomazic, William A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design procedure for transpiration-cooled strut-supported turbine rotor blades (open access)

Design procedure for transpiration-cooled strut-supported turbine rotor blades

From Summary: "The procedure currently employed by the NACA Lewis Laboratory in the design of transpiration-cooled strut-supported turbine rotor blades is discussed. The strut is the internal blade supporting member and also serves to partition the blade into separate cooling-air passages. Orifices in the blade base, which meter the cooling-air to each internal passage, are used in conjunction with a constant chordwise permeability."
Date: December 19, 1955
Creator: Prasse, Ernst I. & Livingood, John N. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary investigation of effect on performance of dividing conical-spike nose inlets into halves at Mach numbers 1.5 to 2.0 (open access)

Preliminary investigation of effect on performance of dividing conical-spike nose inlets into halves at Mach numbers 1.5 to 2.0

Inserting a splitter plate in the subsonic diffuser caused a pressure-recovery loss of about 1 percent for an inlet with a long nearly constant-area throat section. The loss was due to the increased surface area. Another inlet, which had a comparatively rapid area increase immediately after the throat, experienced pressure-recovery losses of 5 and 6 percent at Mach numbers of 1.8 and 2.0, respectively, and about 1 percent at Mach 1.5.
Date: December 19, 1955
Creator: Allen, John L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance and Component Frontal Areas of a Hypothetical Two-Spool Turbojet Engine for Three Modes of Operation (open access)

Performance and Component Frontal Areas of a Hypothetical Two-Spool Turbojet Engine for Three Modes of Operation

Engine performance is better for constant outer-spool mechanical-speed operation than for constant inner-spool mechanical-speed operation over most of the flight range considered. Combustor and afterburner frontal areas are about the same for the two modes. Engine performance for a mode characterized by a constant outer-spool equivalent speed over part of the flight range and a constant outer-spool mechanical speed over the rest of the flight range is better that that for constant outer-spool mechanical speed operation.
Date: December 19, 1955
Creator: Dugan, James F., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of the Correlation Between Flight and Wind-Tunnel Buffeting Loads (open access)

A Study of the Correlation Between Flight and Wind-Tunnel Buffeting Loads

Report presenting a comparison of the buffet loads measured on wind-tunnel models with loads measured in flight, which indicate that a simple strain-gage measurement can be used in wind tunnel testing that can be used to predict the wing buffet loads on the airplane. The technique appears to be usable for both unswept and swept configurations.
Date: July 19, 1955
Creator: Huston, Wilber B.; Rainey, A. Gerald & Baker, Thomas F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary investigation at Mach number 1.9 of simulated wing-root inlets (open access)

Preliminary investigation at Mach number 1.9 of simulated wing-root inlets

Report presenting an experimental investigation to study several wing-root inlet configurations at Mach number 1.9. The inlets were of triangular and rectangular shape and external compression was provided by two-dimensional wedge surfaces. Results regarding the pressure-recovery and mass-flow data, effect of inlet side plates and curved diffusers, exit and inlet total-pressure distributions, improvement of exit total-pressure profiles, and inlet tests at zero flight speed are provided.
Date: January 19, 1955
Creator: Piercy, Thomas G. & Weinstein, Maynard I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Additional experimental heat-transfer and durability data on several forced-convection, air-cooled, strut-supported turbine blades of improved design (open access)

Additional experimental heat-transfer and durability data on several forced-convection, air-cooled, strut-supported turbine blades of improved design

Report presenting an investigation at the Lewis laboratory to develop air-cooled, strut-supported turbine blades. Six blades were investigated in a full-scale turbojet engine to obtain data on blade durability and blade-cooling effectiveness and strut temperature. Results regarding the heat-transfer investigation and blade-durability investigation are provided.
Date: January 19, 1955
Creator: Schum, Eugene F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the plane potential flow past a lattice of arbitrary airfoils (open access)

On the plane potential flow past a lattice of arbitrary airfoils

The two-dimensional, incompressible potential flow past a lattice of airfoils of arbitrary shape is investigated theoretically. The problem is treated by usual methods of conformal mapping in several stages, one stage corresponding to the mapping of the framework of the arbitrary line lattice and another significant stage corresponding to the Theodorsen method for the mapping of the arbitrary single wing profile into a circle. A particular feature in the theoretical treatment is the special handling of the regions at an infinite distance in front of and behind the lattice. Expressions are given for evaluation of the velocity and pressure distribution at the airfoil boundary. An illustrative numerical example is included.
Date: November 19, 1943
Creator: Garrick, I. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of YJ73-GE-3 turbojet engine in altitude test chamber (open access)

Performance of YJ73-GE-3 turbojet engine in altitude test chamber

Report presenting the steady-state performance of the YJ73-GE-3 turbojet engine in an altitude test chamber for a range of exhaust-nozzle areas, simulated altitudes, and Mach numbers. A method of performance calculation based on engine pumping characteristics is provided. Results regarding performance maps, pumping characteristics and performance prediction, thrust correlation, effect of inlet temperature on performance, calculated performance from pumping characteristics, and altitude-ignition characteristics are provided.
Date: January 19, 1955
Creator: Kaufman, Harold R. & Dobson, Wilbur F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical Prediction of Pressure Distributions on Nonlifting Airfoils at High Subsonic Speeds (open access)

Theoretical Prediction of Pressure Distributions on Nonlifting Airfoils at High Subsonic Speeds

"Theoretical pressure distributions on nonlifting circular-arc airfoils in two-dimensional flows with high subsonic free-stream velocity are found by determining approximate solutions, through an iteration process, of an integral equation for transonic flow proposed by Oswatitsch. The integral equation stems directly from the small-disturbance theory for transonic flow. This method of analysis possesses the advantage of remaining in the physical, rather than the hodograph, variable and can be applied in airfoils having curved surfaces" (p. 1).
Date: November 19, 1953
Creator: Spreiter, John R. & Alksne, Alberta
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analysis of the Effects of Aeroelasticity on Static Longitudinal Stability and Control of a Swept-Wing Airplane (open access)

An Analysis of the Effects of Aeroelasticity on Static Longitudinal Stability and Control of a Swept-Wing Airplane

From Introduction: "The results of the aforementioned study are presented in this report together with the method of analysis employed. The net stability change is shown together with the individual contributions due to flexibility of wing, tail, and fuselage, both including and neglecting the effect of inertial loads."
Date: March 19, 1951
Creator: Skoog, Richard B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The hydrodynamic characteristics of modified rectangular flat plates having aspect ratios of 1.00, 0.25, and 0.125 and operating near a free water surface (open access)

The hydrodynamic characteristics of modified rectangular flat plates having aspect ratios of 1.00, 0.25, and 0.125 and operating near a free water surface

Report presents the results of an investigation conducted to determine the hydrodynamic forces and moments acting on modified rectangular flat plates with aspect ratios of 1.00, 0.25, and 0.125 mounted on a single strut and operating at several depths of submersion. A simple method has been developed by modification of Falkner's vortex-lattice theory which enables the prediction of the lift characteristics in unseparated flow at large depths. This method shows good agreement with experimental data from the present tests and with aerodynamic data at all angles investigated for aspect ratios of 1.00 and 0.25 and at angles up to 16 degrees for aspect ratio 0.125. Above 16 degrees for aspect ratio 0.125, the predicted lift proved too high.
Date: January 19, 1954
Creator: Wadlin, Kenneth L.; Ramsen, John A. & Vaughan, Victor L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The near noise field of static jets and some model studies of devices for noise reduction (open access)

The near noise field of static jets and some model studies of devices for noise reduction

An experimental study is presented of the pressure fluctuations near jet exhaust streams made during unchoked operation of a turbojet engine and a 1-inch-diameter high-temperature model jet and during choked operation of various sizes of model jets with unheated air. The tests for unchoked operation indicate a random spectrum of rather narrow band width which varies in frequency content with axial position along the jet. Pressure surveys from the model tests along lines parallel to the 15 degree jet boundary indicate that the station of greatest pressure fluctuations is determined by the jet velocity and the radial distance, with a tendency of the maximum to shift downstream as either parameter is increased.
Date: February 19, 1954
Creator: Lassiter, Leslie W. & Hubbard, Harvey H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Limitations Imposed on One-Spool Turbojet-Engine Designs by Turbines Having Downstream Stators at 0, 2.0, and 2.8 Flight Mach Numbers (open access)

Analysis of Limitations Imposed on One-Spool Turbojet-Engine Designs by Turbines Having Downstream Stators at 0, 2.0, and 2.8 Flight Mach Numbers

Memorandum presenting an aerodynamic design-point analysis of one-spool turbojet engines with one-stage turbines with one and with two rows of downstream stator blades. The object of the analysis was to evaluate the design characteristics of the turbines in comparison with conventional one- and two-stage turbines, to determine the extent to which exit whirl can be increased before causing weight-flow capacity to decrease, and to determine the effect of downstream stators on engine design limitations.
Date: January 19, 1955
Creator: Cavicchi, Richard H. & Constantine, Anita B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analysis of a Nuclear Powered Supercritical-Water Cycle for Aircraft Propulsion (open access)

An Analysis of a Nuclear Powered Supercritical-Water Cycle for Aircraft Propulsion

Memorandum presenting an analysis to indicate the feasibility of the supercritical water compressor jet cycle for nuclear powered aircraft. Performance values of the cycle are given for a range of design-point engine operating conditions and subsonic flight conditions.
Date: January 19, 1953
Creator: Karp, Irving M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Additional Experiments With Flat-Top Wing- Body Combinations at High Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Additional Experiments With Flat-Top Wing- Body Combinations at High Supersonic Speeds

Memorandum presenting an experimental study of the effects of several variations in configuration geometry on the aerodynamic characteristics of flat-top wing-body combinations. Generally, the configurations consist of one half of a body of revolution mounted beneath a wing of essentially arrow plan form. Results regarding the effect of trailing-edge sweep, effect of the addition of auxiliary bodies, effect of tip-flap deflection, effect of dihedral, effect of leading-edge sweep, effect of fuselage fineness ratio, effect of fuselage profile shape, and static longitudinal stability characteristics are provided.
Date: February 19, 1957
Creator: Syvertson, Clarence A.; Wong, Thomas J. & Gloria, Hermilo R.
System: The UNT Digital Library