48 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Standard nomenclature for airspeeds with tables and charts for use in calculation of airspeed (open access)

Standard nomenclature for airspeeds with tables and charts for use in calculation of airspeed

Symbols and definition of various airspeed terms that have been adopted as standard by the NACA subcommittee on aircraft structural design are presented. The equations, charts, and tables required in the evaluation of true airspeed, calibrated airspeed, equivalent airspeed, impact and dynamic pressures, and Mach and Reynolds numbers have been compiled. Tables of the standard atmosphere to an altitude of 65,000 feet and a tentative extension to an altitude of 100,000 feet are given along with the basic equations and constants on which both the standard atmosphere and the tentative extension are based.
Date: July 17, 1946
Creator: Aiken, William S., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Heat and Compressibility Effects in Internal Flow Systems and High-Speed Tests of a Ram-Jet System (open access)

Analysis of Heat and Compressibility Effects in Internal Flow Systems and High-Speed Tests of a Ram-Jet System

Report discussing an analysis has been made by the NACA of the effects of heat and compressibility in the flow through the internal systems of aircraft along with equations and charts are developed whereby the flow characteristics at key stations in a typical internal system may be readily obtained.
Date: July 21, 1942
Creator: Becker, John V. & Baals, Donald D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Tests of Four- and Six-Blade Single- and Dual-Rotating Tractor Propellers (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Tests of Four- and Six-Blade Single- and Dual-Rotating Tractor Propellers

"Test of 10-foot diameter, four and six blade single-rotating and dual-rotating propellers were conducted in the NACA propeller-research tunnel. The propellers were mounted at the front end of a streamline body incorporating spinners to house the hub portions. The effect of a symmetrical wing mounted in the slipstream ranged from 20 degrees to 65 degrees setting corresponds to airplane speeds greater than 500 miles per hour. The results indicate that dual-rotating propellers were from 0 to 6 percent more efficient than single-rotating ones; but, when the propellers operated in the presence of a wing, the gain was reduced by about one-half" (p. 319).
Date: July 13, 1942
Creator: Biermann, David & Hartman, Edwin P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of mass distribution on the lateral stability and control characteristics of an airplane as determined by tests of a model in the free-flight tunnel (open access)

The effect of mass distribution on the lateral stability and control characteristics of an airplane as determined by tests of a model in the free-flight tunnel

The effects of mass distribution on lateral stability and control characteristics of an airplane have been determined by flight tests of a model in the NACA free-flight tunnel. In the investigation, the rolling and yawing moments of inertia were increased from normal values to values up to five times normal. For each moment-of-inertia condition, combinations of dihedral and vertical-tail area representing a variety of airplane configurations were tested. The results of the flight tests of the model were correlated with calculated stability and control characteristics and, in general, good agreement was obtained.
Date: July 20, 1943
Creator: Campbell, John P. & Seacord, Charles L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of an Airplane Equipped with Several Different Sets of Wings (open access)

An Investigation of the Aerodynamic Characteristics of an Airplane Equipped with Several Different Sets of Wings

This investigation was conducted by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics at Langley Field, Va., at the request of the Army Air Corps, for the purpose of comparing the full scale lift and drag characteristics of an airplane equipped with several sets of wings of commonly used airfoil sections. A Sperry Messenger Airplane with wings of R.A.F.-15, U.S.A.-5, U.S.A.-27, and Gottingen 387 airfoil sections was flown and the lift and drag characteristics of the airplane with each set of wings were determined by means of glide tests. The results are presented in tabular and curve form.
Date: July 9, 1928
Creator: Crowley, J. W., Jr. & Green, M. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A new chart for estimating the absolute ceiling of an airplane (open access)

A new chart for estimating the absolute ceiling of an airplane

This report is concerned with the derivation of a chart for estimating the absolute ceiling of an airplane. This chart may be used in conjunction with the usual curves of power required and power available as an accurate substitute for extended calculation, or it may be used in the estimation of absolute ceiling when power curves are not available.
Date: July 1930
Creator: Diehl, Walter S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exact solutions of laminar-boundary-layer equations with constant property values for porous wall with variable temperature (open access)

Exact solutions of laminar-boundary-layer equations with constant property values for porous wall with variable temperature

From Summary: "Exact solution of the laminar-boundary-layer equations for wedge-type flow with constant property values are presented for transpiration-cooled surfaces with variable wall temperatures. The difference between wall and stream temperature is assumed proportional to a power of the distance from the leading edge. Solutions are given for a Prandtl number of 0.7 and ranges of pressure-gradient, cooling-air-flow, and wall-temperature-gradient parameters. Boundary-layer profiles, dimensionless boundary-layer thicknesses, and convective heat-transfer coefficients are given in both tabular and graphical form. Corresponding results for constant wall temperature and for impermeable surfaces are included for comparison purposes."
Date: July 15, 1954
Creator: Donoughe, Patrick L. & Livingood, John N. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Turbulent Free-Convection Boundary Layer on Flat Plate (open access)

Analysis of Turbulent Free-Convection Boundary Layer on Flat Plate

"With the use of Karman's integrated momentum equation for the boundary layer and data on the wall-shearing stress and heat transfer in forced-convection flow, a calculation was carried out for the flow and heat transfer in the turbulent free-convection boundary layer on a vertical flat plate. The calculation is for a fluid with a Prandtl number that is close to 1. A formula was derived for the heat-transfer coefficient that was in good agreement with experimental data in the range of Grashof numbers from 10sup10 to 10sup12" (p. 1).
Date: July 12, 1950
Creator: Eckert, E. R. G. & Jackson, Thomas W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of effectiveness of convection-, transpiration-, and film-cooling methods with air as coolant (open access)

Comparison of effectiveness of convection-, transpiration-, and film-cooling methods with air as coolant

From Summary: "Various parts of aircraft propulsion engines that are in contact with hot gases often require cooling. Transpiration and film cooling, new methods that supposedly utilize cooling air more effectively than conventional convection cooling, have already been proposed. This report presents material necessary for a comparison of the cooling requirements of these three methods. Correlations that are regarded by the authors as the most reliable today are employed in evaluating each of the cooling processes."
Date: July 9, 1953
Creator: Eckert, E. R. G. & Livingood, John N. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Linearized Characteristics Method and Its Application to Practical Nonlinear Supersonic Problems (open access)

The Linearized Characteristics Method and Its Application to Practical Nonlinear Supersonic Problems

"The methods of characteristics has been linearized by assuming that the flow field can be represented as a basic flow field determined by nonlinearized methods and a linearized superposed flow field that accounts for small changes of boundary conditions. The method has been applied to two-dimensional rotational flow where the basic flow is potential flow and to axially symmetric problems where conical flows have been used as the basic flows. In both cases the method allows the determination of the flow field to be simplified and the numerical work to be reduced to a few calculations. The calculations of axially symmetric flow can be simplified if tabulated values of some coefficients of the conical flow are obtained" (p. 933).
Date: July 24, 1951
Creator: Ferri, Antonio
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compressibility and Heating Effects on Pressure Loss and Cooling of a Baffled Cylinder Barrel (open access)

Compressibility and Heating Effects on Pressure Loss and Cooling of a Baffled Cylinder Barrel

"Theoretical investigations have shown that, because air is compressible, the pressure-drop requirements for cooling an air-cooled engine will be much greater at high altitudes and high speeds than at sea level and low speeds. Tests were conducted by the NACA to obtain some experimental confirmation of the effect of air compressibility on cooling and pressure loss of a baffled cylinder barrel and to evaluate various methods of analysis. The results reported in the present paper are regarded as preliminary to tests on single-cylinder and multicylinder engines. Tests were conducted over a wide range of air flows and density altitudes" (p. 1).
Date: July 1, 1944
Creator: Goldstein, Arthur W. & Ellerbrock, Herman H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compressibility and Heating Effects on Pressure Loss and Cooling of a Baffled Cylinder Barrel (open access)

Compressibility and Heating Effects on Pressure Loss and Cooling of a Baffled Cylinder Barrel

"Theoretical investigations have shown that, because air is compressible, the pressure-drop requirements for cooling an air-cooled engine will be much greater at high altitudes and high speeds than at sea level and low speeds. Tests were conducted by the NACA to obtain some experimental confirmation of the effect of air compressibility on cooling and pressure loss of a baffled cylinder barrel and to evaluate various methods of analysis. The results reported in the present paper are regarded as preliminary to tests on single-cylinder and multi-cylinder engines. Tests were conducted over a wide range of air flows and density altitudes" (p. 185).
Date: July 1, 1944
Creator: Goldstein, Arthur W. & Ellerbrock, Herman H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure distribution over an NACA 23012 airfoil with a fixed slot and a slotted flap (open access)

Pressure distribution over an NACA 23012 airfoil with a fixed slot and a slotted flap

Report presents the results of a pressure-distribution investigation conducted in the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory 7 by 10-foot wind tunnel to determine the air loads on an NACA 23012 airfoil in combination with a fixed leading-edge slot and a slotted flap. Pressures were measured over the upper and lower surfaces of the component parts of the combination for several angles of attack and at several flap settings. The data, presented as pressure diagrams and graphs of section coefficients, are applicable to rib, slat, and flap designs for the combination.
Date: July 30, 1941
Creator: Harris, Thomas A. & Lowry, John G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of variation of chord and span of ailerons on rolling and yawing moments in level flight (open access)

Effect of variation of chord and span of ailerons on rolling and yawing moments in level flight

This report presents the results of an investigation of the rolling and yawing moments due to ailerons of various chords and spans on two airfoils having the Clark Y and U. S. A. 27 wing sections. Some attention is devoted to a study of the effect of scale on rolling and yawing moments and to the effect of slightly rounding the wing tips. The results apply to level flight with the wing chord set at an angle of attack of +4 degrees and to conditions of zero pitch, zero yaw, and zero roll of the airplane. It is planned later to extend the investigation to other attitudes for monoplane and biplane combinations. The work was conducted in the 10 foot wind tunnel of the Bureau of Standards on models of 60-inch span and 10-inch chord. (author).
Date: July 10, 1928
Creator: Heald, R. H. & Strother, D. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Airfoil section characteristics as affected by protuberances (open access)

Airfoil section characteristics as affected by protuberances

From Introduction: "The present report deals with another phase of the investigation; that is, the effects on airfoil section characteristics of protuberances extending along the entire span from the airfoil surface."
Date: July 11, 1932
Creator: Jacobs, Eastman N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of sweepback on boundary layer and separation (open access)

Effects of sweepback on boundary layer and separation

"Following a law of stress adopted in the Navier-Stokes equations, the configuration of the viscous flow in planes at right angles to the axis of an infinite cylinder is found to be independent of the axial motion of the cylinder. In the limiting case of a yawed or swept wing of very high aspect ratio, certain boundary-layer and separation phenomena are thus determined independently by the crosswise component of velocity. It follows that the effect of sweepback is to increase the area of stable laminar flow and to decrease the lift coefficient at which flow separation occurs" (p. 487).
Date: July 1947
Creator: Jones, Robert T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theory of wing-body drag at supersonic speeds (open access)

Theory of wing-body drag at supersonic speeds

"The relation of Whitcomb's "area rule" to the linear formulas for wave drag at lightly supersonic speeds is discussed. By adopting an approximate relation between the source strength and the geometry of a wing-body combination, the wave-drag theory is expressed in terms involving the areas intercepted by oblique planes or Mach planes. The resulting formulas are checked by comparison with the drag measurements obtained in wind-tunnel experiments and in experiments with falling models in free air. Finally, a theory for determining wing-body shapes of minimum drag at supersonic Mach numbers is discussed and some preliminary experiments are reported" (p. 757).
Date: July 8, 1953
Creator: Jones, Robert T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elliptic Cones Alone and with Wings at Supersonic Speed (open access)

Elliptic Cones Alone and with Wings at Supersonic Speed

"To help fill the gap in the knowledge of aerodynamics of shapes intermediate between bodies of revolution and flat triangular wings, force and moment characteristics for elliptic cones have been experimentally determined for Mach numbers of 1.97 and 2.94. Elliptic cones having cross-sectional axis ratios from 1 through 6 and with lengths and base areas equal to circular cones of fineness ratios 3.67 and 5 have been studied for angles of bank of 0 degree and 90 degrees. Elliptic and circular cones in combination with triangular wings of aspect ratios 1 and 1.5 also have been considered" (p. 975).
Date: July 17, 1957
Creator: Jorgensen, Leland H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Flow of a Compressible Fluid Past a Circular Arc Profile (open access)

The Flow of a Compressible Fluid Past a Circular Arc Profile

"The Ackeret iteration process is utilized to obtain higher approximations than that of Prandtl and Glauert for the flow of a compressible fluid past a circular arc profile. The procedure is to expand the velocity potential in a power series of the camber coefficient. The first two terms of the development correspond to the Prandtl-Glauert approximation and yield the well-known correction to the circulation about the profile" (p. 385).
Date: July 15, 1944
Creator: Kaplan, Carl
System: The UNT Digital Library
Working Charts for the Determination of the Lift Distribution Between Biplane Wings (open access)

Working Charts for the Determination of the Lift Distribution Between Biplane Wings

"In this report are presented empirical working charts from which the distribution of lift between wings, that is the fraction of the total lift borne by each, can be determined in the positive lift range for any ordinary biplane cellule whose individual wings have the same profile. The variables taken directly into account include airfoil section, stagger, gap/chord ratio, decalage, chord ratio, and overhang. It is shown that the influence of unequal sweepback and unequal dihedral in upper and lower wings may be properly provided for by utilizing the concepts of average stagger and average gap/chord ratio, respectively" (p. 93).
Date: July 11, 1932
Creator: Kuhn, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of free-space oscillating pressures near propellers at flight Mach numbers to 0.72 (open access)

Measurements of free-space oscillating pressures near propellers at flight Mach numbers to 0.72

"In the course of a short flight program initiated to check the theory of Garrick and Watkins (NACA rep. 1198), a series of measurements at three stations were made of the oscillating pressures near a tapered-blade plan-form propeller and rectangular-blade plan form propeller at flight Mach numbers up to 0.72. In contradiction to the results for the propeller studied in NACA rep. 1198, the oscillating pressures in the plane ahead of the propeller were found to be higher than those immediately behind the propeller. Factors such as variation in torque and thrust distribution, since the blades of the present investigation were operating above their design forward speed, may account for this contradiction" (p. 999).
Date: July 1, 1958
Creator: Kurbjun, Max C. & Vogeley, Arthur W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prechamber compression-ignition engine performance (open access)

Prechamber compression-ignition engine performance

Single-cylinder compression-ignition engine tests were made to investigate the performance characteristics of prechamber type of cylinder head. Certain fundamental variables influencing engine performance -- clearance distribution, size, shape, and direction of the passage connecting the cylinder and prechamber, shape of prechamber, cylinder clearance, compression ratio, and boosting -- were independently tested. Results of motoring and of power tests, including several typical indicator cards, are presented.
Date: July 7, 1936
Creator: Moore, Charles S. & Collins, John H., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relative importance of various sources of defect-producing hydrogen introduced into steel during application of vitreous coatings (open access)

Relative importance of various sources of defect-producing hydrogen introduced into steel during application of vitreous coatings

"When porcelain enamels or vitreous-type ceramic coatings are applied to ferrous metals, there is believed to be an evolution of hydrogen gas both during and after the firing operation. At elevated temperatures rapid evolution may result in blistering while if hydrogen becomes trapped in the steel during the rapid cooling following the firing operation gas pressures may be generated at the coating-metal interface and flakes of the coating literally blown off the metal. To determine experimentally the relative importance of the principal sources of the hydrogen causing the defects, a procedure was devised in which heavy hydrogen (deuterium) was substituted in turn for regular hydrogen in each of five possible hydrogen-producing operations in the coating process" (p. 269).
Date: July 12, 1951
Creator: Moore, Dwight G.; Mason, Mary A. & Harrison, William N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamics of a turbojet engine considered as a quasi-static system (open access)

Dynamics of a turbojet engine considered as a quasi-static system

From Summary: "A determination of the dynamic characteristics of a typical turbojet engine with a centrifugal compressor, a sonic-flow turbine-nozzle diaphragm, and fixed area exhaust nozzle is presented. A generalized equation for transient behavior of the engine was developed; this equation was then verified by calculations using compressor and turbine performance charts extrapolated from equilibrium operating data and by experimental data obtained from an engine operated under transients in fuel flow."
Date: July 27, 1949
Creator: Otto, Edward W. & Taylor, Burt L., III
System: The UNT Digital Library