50 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Airfoil Measurements in the DVL High-Speed Wind Tunnel (2.7-Meter Diameter) (open access)

Airfoil Measurements in the DVL High-Speed Wind Tunnel (2.7-Meter Diameter)

Report is a brief summary of investigations on symmetrical and cambered airfoils in the DVL high-speed tunnel. Some information on the effects of low aspect ratio are also included.
Date: June 1949
Creator: Göthert, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Approximate Method for Calculation of the Laminar Boundary Layer with Suction for Bodies of Arbitrary Shape (open access)

An Approximate Method for Calculation of the Laminar Boundary Layer with Suction for Bodies of Arbitrary Shape

From Summary: "Various ways were tried recently to decrease the friction drag of a body in a flow; they all employ influencing the boundary layer. One of them consists in keeping the boundary layer Laminar by suction; promising tests have been carried out. Since for large Reynolds numbers the friction drag of the laminar boundary layer is much lower than that of the turbulent boundary layer, a considerable saving in drag results from keeping the boundary layer laminar, even with the blower power required for suction taken into account."
Date: March 1949
Creator: Schlichting, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Behavior of the Laminar Boundary Layer for Periodically Oscillating Pressure Variation (open access)

Behavior of the Laminar Boundary Layer for Periodically Oscillating Pressure Variation

"The calculation of the phenomena within the boundary layer of bodies immersed in a flow underwent a decisive development on the basis of L. Prandtl's trains of thought, stated more than forth years ago, and by numerous later treatises again and again touching upon them. The requirements of the steadily improving aerodynamics of airplanes have greatly increased with the passing of time and recently research became particularly interested in such phenomena in the boundary layer as are caused by small external disturbances. Experimental results suggest that, for instance, slight fluctuations in the free stream velocities as they occur in wind tunnels or slight wavelike deviations of outer wing contours from the prescribed smooth course as they originate due to construction inaccuracies may exert strong effects on the extent of the laminar boundary layer on the body and thus on the drag" (p. 1).
Date: September 1949
Creator: Quick, August Wilhelm & Schröder, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Boundary Layer Theory, Part 2, Turbulent Flows (open access)

Boundary Layer Theory, Part 2, Turbulent Flows

From Summary: "The flow laws of the actual flows at high Reynolds numbers differ considerably from those of the laminar flows treated in the preceding part. These actual flows show a special characteristic, denoted as turbulence. The character of a turbulent flow is most easily understood the case of the pipe flow. Consider the flow through a straight pipe of circular cross section and with a smooth wall. For laminar flow each fluid particle moves with uniform velocity along a rectilinear path."
Date: April 1949
Creator: Schlichting, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of Counterrotating Propellers (open access)

Calculation of Counterrotating Propellers

"A method for calculation of a counterrotating propeller which is similar to Walchner's method for calculation of the single propeller in the free air stream is developed and compared with measurements. Several dimensions which are important for the design are given end simple formulas for the gain in efficiency derived. Finally a survey of the behavior of the propeller for various operating conditions is presented" (p. 1).
Date: March 1949
Creator: Ginzel, F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Characteristics Method Applied to Stationary Two-Dimensional and Rotationally Symmetrical Gas Flows (open access)

The Characteristics Method Applied to Stationary Two-Dimensional and Rotationally Symmetrical Gas Flows

"By means of characteristics theory, formulas for the numerical treatment of stationary compressible supersonic flows for the two-dimensional and rotationally symmetrical cases have been obtained from their differential equations" (p. 1).
Date: March 1949
Creator: Pfeiffer, F. & Meyer-König, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Class of de Laval Nozzles (open access)

A Class of de Laval Nozzles

"A study is made herein of the irrotational adiabatic motion of a gas in the transition from subsonic to supersonic velocities. A shape of the de Laval nozzle is given, which transforms a homogeneous plane-parallel flow at large subsonic velocity into a supersonic flow without any shockwaves beyond the transition line from the subsonic to the supersonic regions of flow. The method of solution is based on integration near the transition line of the gas equations of motion in the form investigated by S. A. Christianovich" (p. 1).
Date: October 1949
Creator: Falkovich, S. V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Compressible Flow Past Various Plane Profiles Near Sonic Velocity (open access)

The Compressible Flow Past Various Plane Profiles Near Sonic Velocity

"In an earlier report UM No.1117 by Gothert,the single-source method was applied to the compressible flow around circles, ellipses, lunes, and around an elongated body of revolution at different Mach numbers and the results compared as far as possible with the calculations by Lamla ad Busemann. Essentially, it was found that with favorable source arrangement the single-source method is in good agreement with the calculations of the same degree of approximation by Lamla and Busemann. Near sonic velocity the number of steps must be increased considerably in order to sufficiently approximate the adiabatic curve" (p. 1).
Date: March 1949
Creator: Göthert, B. & Kawalki, K. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compression Shocks in Two-Dimensional Gas Flows (open access)

Compression Shocks in Two-Dimensional Gas Flows

"The following are arguments on the compression shocks in gas flow start with a simplified representation of the results of the study made by Th. Meyer as published in the Forschungsheft 62 of the VDI, supplemented by several amplifications for the application. In the treatment of compression shocks, the equation of energy, the equation of continuity, the momentum equation, the equation of state of the particular gas, as well as the condition Of the second law of thermodynamics that no decrease of entropy is possible in an isolated system, must be taken into consideration" (p. 1).
Date: February 1949
Creator: Busemann, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computation of Thin-Walled Prismatic Shells (open access)

Computation of Thin-Walled Prismatic Shells

"We consider a prismatic shell consisting of a finite number of narrow rectangular plates and having in the cross-section a finite number of closed contours (fig. 1(a)). We shall assume that the rectangular plates composing the shell are rigidly joined so that there is no motion of any kind of one plate relative to the others meeting at a given connecting line. The position of a point on the middle prismatic surface is considered to be defined by the coordinate z, the distance to a certain initial cross-section z = O, end the coordinate s determining its position on the contour of the cross-section" (p. 1).
Date: June 1949
Creator: Vlasov, V. Z.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contribution to the Problem of Flow at High Speed (open access)

Contribution to the Problem of Flow at High Speed

Report divided into two sections about flow problems encountered at high speeds. The topics include: 1) A Few General Remarks Covering the Prandtl-Busemann Method; and 2) Effect of Compressibility in Axially Symmetrical Flow around an Ellipsoid.
Date: June 1949
Creator: Schmieden, C. & Kawalki, K. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Spoiler Controls for Remote Control of Flying Missiles (open access)

Development of Spoiler Controls for Remote Control of Flying Missiles

The present report deals with the aerodynamic, constructive, and instrumental development of a spoiler control for remote control of flying missiles.
Date: March 1949
Creator: Ernst, G. & Kramer, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of the Acceleration of Elongated Bodies of Revolution Upon the Resistance in a Compressible Flow (open access)

Effect of the Acceleration of Elongated Bodies of Revolution Upon the Resistance in a Compressible Flow

The problem of the motion of an elongated body of revolution in an incompressible fluid may, as is known, be solved approximately with the aid of the distribution of sources along the axis of the body. In determining the velocity field, the question of whether the body moves uniformly or with an acceleration is no factor in the problem. The presence of acceleration must be taken into account in determining the pressures acting on the body. The resistance of the body arising from the accelerated motion may be computed either directly on the basis of these pressures or with the aid of the so-called associated masses (inertia coefficients). A different condition holds in the case of the motion of bodies in a compressible gas. In this case the finite velocity of sound must be taken into account.
Date: May 1949
Creator: Frankl, F. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exact Calculation of Laminar Boundary Layer in Longitudinal Flow Over a Flat Plate With Homogeneous Suction (open access)

Exact Calculation of Laminar Boundary Layer in Longitudinal Flow Over a Flat Plate With Homogeneous Suction

"Lately it has been proposed to reduce the friction drag of a body in a flow for the technically important large Reynolds numbers by the following expedient: the boundary layer, normally turbulent, is artificially kept laminar up to high Reynolds numbers by suction. The reduction in friction drag thus obtained is of the order of magnitude of 60 to 80 percent of the turbulent friction drag, since the latter, for large Reynolds numbers, is several times the laminar friction drag. In considering the idea mentioned one has first to consider whether suction is a possible means of keeping the boundary layer laminar" (p. 1).
Date: April 1949
Creator: Iglisch, Rudolf
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Flights for Testing of a Reactor as an Expedient for the Termination of Dangerous Spins (open access)

Experimental Flights for Testing of a Reactor as an Expedient for the Termination of Dangerous Spins

"In the Institute for Flight Mechanics of the DVL a reactor arrangement with a maximum output of 100 kg was investigated as an expedient for the termination of dangerous spins on an airplane of the FW 56 type. reproduce the influence of a disturbance of the steady spin condition by a pitching or yawing moment. The tests were meant to reproduce the influence of a disturbance of the steady spin condition by a pitching and yawing moment" (p. 1).
Date: July 1949
Creator: Höhler, P. & v. Köppen, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental study of flow past turbine blades (open access)

Experimental study of flow past turbine blades

From Introduction: "The requirements on gas turbines for aircraft power units, namely, adequate efficiency, operation at high gas temperatures, low weight, and small dimensions, must be taken into consideration during the design of the blading. To secure good efficiency, it is necessary that the gas flow past the blades as smoothly as possible without separation. This is relatively easily obtainable in the accelerated flow of turbine blading, if the blade spacing is chosen small enough. A small blade spacing, however, is detrimental to the other requirements outlined above. Operation at high gas temperatures usually calls for blade cooling. This cooling is associated with a power input that lowers the turbine efficiency. Since the amount of heat that must be carried off for coding a blade can be influenced rather little, the gross power input for a turbine stage can be reduced by keeping the number of blades to a minimum, that is, with blades of high spacing ratio. But here also a limit is imposed, the exceeding of which is followed by separation of flow. Hence the requirement of finding blade forms on which the flow separates at rather high spacing ratios."
Date: June 1949
Creator: Eckert, E. & Vietinghoff-Scheel, K. V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flow Measurement by Means of Light Interference (open access)

Flow Measurement by Means of Light Interference

"There has been under development for the high-speed wind tunnel of the LFA an optical measuring arrangement for the qualitative and quantitative investigation of flow. By the use of interference measurements, the determination of density at the surface of the bodies being tested in the air stream and in the vicinity of these bodies can be undertaken. The results obtained so far in the simple preliminary investigations show that it is possible, even at a low Reynolds number, to obtain the density field in the neighborhood of a test body by optical means" (p. 1).
Date: August 1949
Creator: Zobel
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flow Pattern in a Converging-Diverging Nozzle (open access)

Flow Pattern in a Converging-Diverging Nozzle

"The present report describes a new method for the prediction of the flow pattern of a gas in the two-dimensional and axially symmetrical case. It is assumed that the expansion of the gas is adiabatic and the flow stationary. The several assumptions necessary of the nozzle shape effect, in general, no essential limitation on the conventional nozzles" (p. 1).
Date: March 1949
Creator: Oswatitsch, K. & Rothstein, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gas Motion in a Local Supersonic Region and Conditions of Potential-Flow Breakdown (open access)

Gas Motion in a Local Supersonic Region and Conditions of Potential-Flow Breakdown

"For a certain Mach number of the oncoming flow, the local velocity first reaches the value of the local velocity of sound (M = 1) at some point on the surface of the body located within the flow. This Mach number is designated the critical Mach number M(sub cr). By increasing the flow velocity, a supersonic local region is formed bounded by the body contour and the line of transition from subsonic to supersonic velocity. As is shown by observations with the Toepler apparatus, at a certain flow Mach number M > M(sub cr) a shock wave is formed near the body that closes the local supersonic region from behind" (p. 1).
Date: May 1949
Creator: Nikolskii, A. A. & Taganov, G. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat Transmission in the Boundary Layer (open access)

Heat Transmission in the Boundary Layer

"In the present paper which deals with the heat transfer between the gas and the wall for large temperature drops and large velocities use is made of the method of Dorodnitsyn of the introduction of a new independent variable, with this difference, however, that the relation between the temperature field (that is, density) and the velocity field in the general case considered is not assumed given but is determined from the solution of the problem. The effect of the compressibility arising from the heat transfer is thus taken into account (at the same time as the effect of the compressibility at the large velocities). A method is given for determining the coefficients of heat transfer and the friction coefficients required in many technical problems for a curved wall in a gas flow at large Mach numbers and temperature drops" (p. 1).
Date: April 1949
Creator: Kalikhman, L. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Influence of the Application of Power during Spin Recovery of Multiengine Airplanes (open access)

The Influence of the Application of Power during Spin Recovery of Multiengine Airplanes

"The effect of application of power, so far not clarified, is investigated in the present report in order to give the pilot, in addition to the control measures, an expedient for spin recovery of multiengine airplanes. To this end, a series of spins was performed with an airplane of the Go 150 type. It was possible to set up a uniform rule regarding the effect of power, for right end left spins as well as for any combination of the direction of rotation of the propellers" (p. 1).
Date: June 1949
Creator: Höhler, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of Conditions of Titanium Carbonization - 4 (open access)

Investigation of Conditions of Titanium Carbonization - 4

"In a previous paper, results are presented of accurate investigations of the processes of titanium carbonization and the succeeding titanium carbide decarbonization as related to the phenomenon of the graphitization of soot by heating at a constant temperature in atmospheres of pure hydrogen and carbon monoxide. These tests showed that the processes of titanium carbonization-decarbonization in an atmosphere of pure gases without nitrogen proceed in the same direction as the analogous processes under the conditions of the production furnace. In this case, however, the presence of admixtures of nitrogen changes the quantitative results of the decarbonization process" (p. 1).
Date: July 1949
Creator: Meerson, G. A. & Lipkes, Y. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigations on the Stability, Oscillation, and Stress Conditions of Airplanes with Tab Control: First Partial Report. Derivation of the Equations of Motion and their General Solutions (open access)

Investigations on the Stability, Oscillation, and Stress Conditions of Airplanes with Tab Control: First Partial Report. Derivation of the Equations of Motion and their General Solutions

"For the design and the construction of airplanes the control is of special significance, not only with regard to the flight mechanical properties but also for the proportional arrangement of wing unit, fuselage, and tail unit. Whereas these problems may be regarded as solved for direct control of airplane motions, that is, for immediate operation of the control surfaces, they are not clarified as to oscillations, stability, and stress phenomena occurring in flight motions with Indirect control, as realized for instance in tab control" (p. 1).
Date: September 1949
Creator: Filzek, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigations on the Stability, Oscillation, and Stress Conditions of Airplanes With Tab Control: Second Partial Report: Application of the Solutions Obtained in the First Partial Report to Tab-Controlled Airplanes (open access)

Investigations on the Stability, Oscillation, and Stress Conditions of Airplanes With Tab Control: Second Partial Report: Application of the Solutions Obtained in the First Partial Report to Tab-Controlled Airplanes

The first partial report, FB 2000, contained a discussion of the derivation of the equations of motion and their solutions for a tab-controlled airplane; the results obtained there are now to be applied to the longitudinal motion of tab-controlled airplanes. In view of the abundance of structural factors and aerodynamic parameters, a general discussion of the problems is unfeasible. Thus it is demonstrated on the basis of examples what stability, oscillation, and stress conditions are to be expected for tab-controlled airplanes. (author).
Date: September 1949
Creator: Filzek, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library