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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
Force and Pressure Measurements on Several Canopy-Fuselage Configurations at Transonic Mach Numbers 1.41 and 2.01 (open access)

Force and Pressure Measurements on Several Canopy-Fuselage Configurations at Transonic Mach Numbers 1.41 and 2.01

Report presenting an investigation on canopy pressures and canopy-fuselage forces and moments under conditions of combined pitch and sideslip. The canopy configurations tested varied in windshield shape (flat, vee, and round) and were tested at two Mach numbers and Reynolds numbers.
Date: December 15, 1955
Creator: Robins, A. Warner
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of inlet installation on the zero-lift drag of a 60 degree delta-wing-body configuration from flight tests at Mach numbers from 0.8 to 1.86 (open access)

The effect of inlet installation on the zero-lift drag of a 60 degree delta-wing-body configuration from flight tests at Mach numbers from 0.8 to 1.86

Report presenting zero-lift drag results for two 60 degree delta-wing configurations with air inlets. One had twin conical-shock semi-circular scoops just ahead of the wing-body juncture and one had a modified wing section over the inboard portion to allow installation of modified triangular inlets in the wing leading edge. Results regarding the drag coefficients and mass-flow ratios are provided.
Date: December 15, 1955
Creator: Merlet, Charles F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lift, drag, and longitudinal stability at Mach numbers from 1.4 to 2.3 of a rocket-powered model having a 52.5 degree sweptback wing of aspect ratio 3 and inline tail surfaces (open access)

Lift, drag, and longitudinal stability at Mach numbers from 1.4 to 2.3 of a rocket-powered model having a 52.5 degree sweptback wing of aspect ratio 3 and inline tail surfaces

Report presenting an investigation of a configuration with a body of fineness ratio 16.9, a 52.5 degree sweptback wing of aspect ratio 3, taper ratio 0.2, and NACA 65A004 airfoil section, and an incline tail which was aeropulsed continuously in pitching during free flight with and without a sustainer rocket motor operating. The Mach number range covered was from 1.4 to 2.3. Results regarding drag, total normal force and pitching moment, wing normal-force-curve slope, flow conditions at the horizontal tail, and cross coupling are provided.
Date: December 15, 1955
Creator: Gillespie, Warren, Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flight Investigation of the Effect of Underwing Propulsive Jets on the Lift, Drag, and Longitudinal Stability of a Delta-Wing Configuration at Mach Numbers From 1.23 to 1.62 (open access)

Flight Investigation of the Effect of Underwing Propulsive Jets on the Lift, Drag, and Longitudinal Stability of a Delta-Wing Configuration at Mach Numbers From 1.23 to 1.62

Report discussing testing of a multijet 60 degree delta-wing airplane configuration with twin-engine exhausts at specified locations under the wing. Data was obtained for jet-on and jet-off conditions between a range of Mach numbers. Results are presented for the effect of jet on drag, jet effect on lift, static longitudinal stability, and dynamic longitudinal stability.
Date: December 15, 1955
Creator: Falanga, Ralph A. & Judd, Joseph H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Dissolved Oxygen on the Filterability of Jet Fuels for Temperatures Between 300 Degrees and 400 Degrees Fahrenheit (open access)

Effect of Dissolved Oxygen on the Filterability of Jet Fuels for Temperatures Between 300 Degrees and 400 Degrees Fahrenheit

"The effect of dissolved oxygen in the filter-clogging characteristics of three JP-4 and two JP-5 fuels was studied at 300 degrees to 400 degrees F in a bench- scale rig, employing filter paper as the filter medium. The residence time of the fuel at the high temperature was approximately 6 seconds" (p. 1).
Date: December 28, 1955
Creator: McKeown, Anderson B. & Hibbard, Robert 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
The effect of fluid injection on the compressible turbulent boundary layer: preliminary tests on transpiration cooling of a flat plate at M = 2.7 with air as the injected gas (open access)

The effect of fluid injection on the compressible turbulent boundary layer: preliminary tests on transpiration cooling of a flat plate at M = 2.7 with air as the injected gas

Report presenting local values of heat-transfer rate and temperature-recovery factor obtained on a transpiration-cooled flat plate. The results show primarily that transpiration cooling in a turbulent boundary layer at M = 2.7 has marked effects on the heat transfer and recovery temperature for nearly uniform air injection along the plate.
Date: December 21, 1955
Creator: Rubesin, Morris W.; Pappas, Constantine C. & Okuno, Arthur F.
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
A method for simulating the atmospheric entry of long-range ballistic missiles (open access)

A method for simulating the atmospheric entry of long-range ballistic missiles

From Summary: "It is demonstrated with the aid of similitude arguments that a model launched from a hypervelocity gun upstream through a special supersonic nozzle should experience aerodynamic heating and resulting thermal stresses like those encountered by a long-range ballistic missile entering the earth's atmosphere. This demonstration hinges on the requirements that model and missile be geometrically similar and made of the same material, and that they have the same flight speed and Reynolds number (based on conditions just outside the boundary layer) at corresponding points in their trajectories. The hypervelocity gun provides the model with the required initial speed, while the nozzle scales the atmosphere, in terms of density variation, to provide the model with speeds and Reynolds numbers over its entire trajectory."
Date: December 28, 1955
Creator: Eggers, A. J., Jr.
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
Investigation of Interference Lift, Drag, and Pitching Moment of a Series of Triangular-Wing and Body Combinations at a Mach Number of 1.94 (open access)

Investigation of Interference Lift, Drag, and Pitching Moment of a Series of Triangular-Wing and Body Combinations at a Mach Number of 1.94

Report presenting an investigation at Mach number 1.94 of a series of triangular-wing and body combinations to determine the interference lift, drag, and pitching moment. The models had a series of seven flat-plate triangular wings of varying scale, four with semiapex angles of 30 degrees, and three with semiapex angles of 45 degrees. Results indicated that the interference between the wing and the body gave an increase in lift over the wing and body alone, but at the expense of more drag.
Date: December 21, 1955
Creator: Coletti, Donald E.
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
High-Altitude Performance of an Experimental Turbular Prevaporizing Combustor (open access)

High-Altitude Performance of an Experimental Turbular Prevaporizing Combustor

Memorandum presenting an investigation of an experimental tubular combustor that provides for prevaporizing and premixing of the fuel with a part of the air before its introduction into the combustion zone. Combustion efficiency and total-pressure loss data are presented for three configurations selected from a total of 43 different modifications investigated. Results regarding the combustor development, comparison of liquid and gaseous fuel, combustor total-pressure losses, combustor-outlet temperature distribution, and evaluation of experimental prevaporizing combustors are provided.
Date: December 9, 1954
Creator: Butze, Helmut F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation to Mach number 2.0 of shock-positioning control systems for a variable-geometry inlet in combination with a J34 turbojet engine (open access)

Investigation to Mach number 2.0 of shock-positioning control systems for a variable-geometry inlet in combination with a J34 turbojet engine

Report presenting shock-position controls designed to actuate the translating spike and variable bypass of a variable-geometry inlet in the 8- by 6-foot supersonic tunnel. The operation of the inlet was observed in combination with a J34 turbojet engine at a range of Mach numbers. Results regarding terminal-shock-positioning control systems and combination control are provided.
Date: December 20, 1954
Creator: Leissler, L. Abbott & Nettles, J. Cary
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation at Supersonic Speeds of the Effect of Jet Mach Number and Divergence Angle of the Nozzle Upon the Pressure of the Base Annulus of a Body of Revolution (open access)

Investigation at Supersonic Speeds of the Effect of Jet Mach Number and Divergence Angle of the Nozzle Upon the Pressure of the Base Annulus of a Body of Revolution

Report presenting an investigation in the 9-inch supersonic tunnel to determine the jet effects for varying jet Mach number and nozzle divergence angle upon the pressure on the base annulus of a model with a cylindrical afterbody. Testing occurred over a wide range of jet static pressure ratios and Mach numbers. Results regarding sonic jets and supersonic jets are provided.
Date: December 17, 1954
Creator: Bromm, August F., Jr. & O'Donnell, Robert M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The effect of stick-force gradient and stick gearing on the tracking accuracy of a fighter airplane (open access)

The effect of stick-force gradient and stick gearing on the tracking accuracy of a fighter airplane

Report presenting steady straight-and-level and steady turning tracking runs against an aerial target using an F-51H airplane equipped with a fixed optical sight and with various combinations of maneuvering stick-force and stick-deflection gradients. Results regarding aim wander, elevator movement, and stick-force variation for various test conditions are provided.
Date: December 17, 1954
Creator: Abramovitz, Marvin & Van Dyke, Rudolph D., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low-Speed Measurements of Rolling and Yawing Stability Derivatives of a 60 Degree Delta-Wing Model (open access)

Low-Speed Measurements of Rolling and Yawing Stability Derivatives of a 60 Degree Delta-Wing Model

Memorandum presenting an investigation in the free-flight tunnel to determine the low-speed rolling and yawing stability derivatives of a 60 degree delta-wing model from 0 to 30 degrees angle of attack. The derivatives were measured by the free-to-damp oscillation technique and by the steady-roll technique.
Date: December 27, 1954
Creator: Johnson, Joseph L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lift and drag characteristics of the Douglas X-3 research airplane obtained during demonstration flights to a Mach number of 1.20 (open access)

Lift and drag characteristics of the Douglas X-3 research airplane obtained during demonstration flights to a Mach number of 1.20

Report presenting lift and drag data obtained during the Douglas X-3 airplane. The data covered the Mach number range from 0.82 to 1.20 with considerable variation in lift. A comparison of the flight data with data from wind-tunnel and rocket-model tests shows that the model tests adequately predict the performance of the airplane.
Date: December 6, 1954
Creator: Bellman, Donald R. & Murphy, Edward D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A preliminary investigation of the use of circulation control to increase the lift of a 45 degree sweptback wing by suction through trailing-edge slots (open access)

A preliminary investigation of the use of circulation control to increase the lift of a 45 degree sweptback wing by suction through trailing-edge slots

Report presenting an investigation to determine the effectiveness of circulation control by applying suction through trailing-edge slots on a 45 degree sweptback wing. Various chordwise extents and depths of slot were investigated with and without deflection of a trailing-edge split flap. Results regarding the correlation of two-dimensional-section results with Ehlers' theory, effectiveness of circulation control on a sweptback wing, effect of slot configuration on circulation control, effect of trailing-edge split flap on circulation control, effect of circulation control on pitching moment, and circulation control at angle of attack are provided.
Date: December 14, 1954
Creator: Cook, Woodrow L.; Griffin, Roy N., Jr. & Hickey, David H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculated Lateral Frequency Response and Lateral Oscillatory Characteristics for Several High-Speed Airplanes in Various Flight Conditions (open access)

Calculated Lateral Frequency Response and Lateral Oscillatory Characteristics for Several High-Speed Airplanes in Various Flight Conditions

"Calculations have been made to determine the effects of Mach number and altitude on the lateral frequency response, the lateral response to a lateral sinusoidal gust distribution, and the period and damping of the lateral oscillation for the North American F-86A, Grumman F9F-2, Republic F-84, Douglas D-558-II, and Bell X-1 airplanes without autopilots. Aeroelastic and unsteady lift effects have not been included in the calculations and may have a large effect on the results for certain flight conditions. The results of the investigation are presented, without analysis, for reference purposes" (p. 1).
Date: December 10, 1953
Creator: Jaquet, Byron M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method for Estimating Lift Interference of Wing-Body Combinations at Supersonic Speeds (open access)

Method for Estimating Lift Interference of Wing-Body Combinations at Supersonic Speeds

Memorandum presenting the use of the modified slender-body method to predict the lift and moment interference of triangular wing-body combinations adapted to combinations with other than triangular wings. The methods are applied to the prediction of the lit-curve slopes of nearly 100 triangular, rectangular, and trapezoidal wing-body configurations.
Date: December 31, 1951
Creator: Nielsen, Jack N. & Kaattari, George E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerodynamic Characteristics of Two Rectangular-plan-form, Allmovable Controls in Combination With a Slender Body of Revolution at Mach Numbers From 3.00 to 6.25 (open access)

Aerodynamic Characteristics of Two Rectangular-plan-form, Allmovable Controls in Combination With a Slender Body of Revolution at Mach Numbers From 3.00 to 6.25

Aerodynamic characteristics of rectangular platform, all-movable controls combined with slender body of revolution at Mach 3 to 6.25. The results showed that lift variations with angle of attack were somewhat nonlinear for both control-body combinations tested.
Date: December 28, 1955
Creator: Wong, Thomas J. & Gloria, Hermilo R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Turbojet engine investigation of effect of thermal shock induced by external water-spray cooling on turbine blades of five high-temperature alloys (open access)

Turbojet engine investigation of effect of thermal shock induced by external water-spray cooling on turbine blades of five high-temperature alloys

Report presenting an investigation of the thermal-shock effect of water-spray impingement upon turbine rotor blades subjected to rated engine operating conditions using external water-spray cooling. Turbine-blade cooling water was turned on and off in cycles which employed either sudden or gradual injection of cooling water. Results regarding blades modified and unmodified for rotating injection are provided.
Date: December 19, 1955
Creator: Freche, John C. & Hickel, Robert O.
System: The UNT Digital Library