Serial/Series Title

The Influence of the Jet of a Propulsion Unit on Nearby Wings (open access)

The Influence of the Jet of a Propulsion Unit on Nearby Wings

"The present investigation was intended to ascertain how far a tail unit is subject to disturbance by the jet of a propulsion unit. The parameters upon which this disturbing influence depends, and the values it reaches, had to be determined" (p. 1).
Date: September 1946
Creator: Falk, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the Behavior of Thin-Walled Panels with Cutouts (open access)

Investigation of the Behavior of Thin-Walled Panels with Cutouts

"The present paper deals with the computation and methods of reinforcement of stiffened panels with cutouts under bending loads such as are applied to the sides of a fuselage. A comparison is maade between the computed and test results. Results are presented of tests on panels with cutouts under tensile and compressive loads" (p. 1).
Date: September 1946
Creator: Podorozhny, A. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Airscrew Gyroscopic Moments (open access)

Airscrew Gyroscopic Moments

"When flying in a turn or pulling out of a dive, the airscrew exerts a gyroscopic moment on the aircraft, In the case of airscrews with three or more blades, arranged symmetrically, the value of the gyroscopic moment is J(sub x) omega(sub x) omega(sub y), where J(sub x) denotes the axial moment of inertia about the axis of rotation of the airscrew, omega(sub x) the angular upeed of the airscrew about its axis, and omega (sub Y) the rotary speed of the whole aircraft about an axis parallel to the plane of the airscrew (e.g., when pulling up, the transverse axis of the aircraft). The gyroscopic moment then tends to rotate the aircraft about an axis perpendicular to those of the two angular speeds and, in the came of airscrews with three or more blades, is constant during a revolution of the airscrew" (p. 1).
Date: September 1946
Creator: Bock, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigations of Pressure Distribution on Fast Flying Bodies (open access)

Investigations of Pressure Distribution on Fast Flying Bodies

"The question to be treated is: how high is the pressure in the bow wave caused by a body flying at supersonic speed, and how far reaching are the destructive effects of that wave? The pressure distribution on an s.S. and an S. projectile of normal speed has been ascertained already by the methods of measurement used at the Ballistic Institute of the Technical Academy of the German Air Forces. Now similar investigations of the conditions on especially fast-flying bodies were carried out" (p. 1).
Date: September 1946
Creator: Stamm, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Further Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Aircraft Engines (open access)

The Further Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Aircraft Engines

"The present report deals with the problems involved in the greater utilization and development of aircraft engine materials, and specifically; piston materials, cylinder heads, exhaust valves, and exhaust gas turbine blading. The blades of the exhaust gas turbine are likely to be the highest stressed components of modern power plants from a thermal-mechanical and chemical standpoint, even though the requirements on exhaust valves of engines with gasoline injection are in general no less stringent. For the fire plate in Diesel engines the specifications for mechanical strength and design are not so stringent, and the question of heat resistance, which under these circumstances is easier obtainable, predominates" (p. 1).
Date: September 1946
Creator: Bollenrath, Franz
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Horizontal Motion of a Wing Near the Ground (open access)

Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Horizontal Motion of a Wing Near the Ground

"By the method of images the horizontal steady motion of a wing at small heights above the ground was investigated in the wind tunnel, A rectangular wing with Clark Y-H profile was tested with and without flaps. The distance from the trailing edge of the wing to the ground was varied within the limits 0.75 less than or = s/c less than or = 0.25. Measurements were made of the lift, the drag, the pitching moment, and the pressure distribution at one section" (p. 1).
Date: September 1946
Creator: Serebrisky, Y. M. & Biachuev, S. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On Laminar and Turbulent Friction (open access)

On Laminar and Turbulent Friction

Report deals, first with the theory of the laminar friction flow, where the basic concepts of Prandtl's boundary layer theory are represented from mathematical and physical points of view, and a method is indicated by means of which even more complicated cases can be treated with simple mathematical means, at least approximately. An attempt is also made to secure a basis for the computation of the turbulent friction by means of formulas through which the empirical laws of the turbulent pipe resistance can be applied to other problems on friction drag.
Date: September 1946
Creator: von Karman, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library