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Investigations at supersonic speeds of 22 triangular wings representing two airfoil sections for each of 11 apex angles (open access)

Investigations at supersonic speeds of 22 triangular wings representing two airfoil sections for each of 11 apex angles

The results of tests of 22 triangular wings, representing two leading-edge shapes for each of 11 apex angles, at Mach numbers 1.62, 1.92, and 1.40 are presented and compared with theory. All wings have a common thickness ratio of 8 percent and a common maximum-thickness point at 18 percent chord. Lift, drag, and pitching moment are given for all wings at each Mach number. The relation of transition in the boundary layer, shocks on the wing surfaces, and characteristics of the pressure distributions is discussed for several wings.
Date: March 30, 1949
Creator: Love, Eugene S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Information Relating to Gust Loads on Airplanes (open access)

Summary of Information Relating to Gust Loads on Airplanes

"Available information on gust structure, airplane reactions, and pertinent operating statistics has been examined. This report attempts to coordinate this information with reference to the prediction of gust loads on airplanes. The material covered represents research up to October 1947" (p. 807).
Date: August 5, 1949
Creator: Donely, Philip
System: The UNT Digital Library
General Theory of Aerodynamic Instability and the Mechanism of Flutter (open access)

General Theory of Aerodynamic Instability and the Mechanism of Flutter

"The aerodynamic forces on an oscillating airfoil or airfoil-aileron combination of three independent degrees of freedom have been determined. The problem resolves itself into the solution of certain definite integrals, which have been identified as Bessel functions of the first and second kind and of zero and first order. The theory, being based on potential flow and the Kutta condition, is fundamentally equivalent to the conventional wing-section theory relating to the steady case" (p. 23).
Date: 1949
Creator: Theodorsen, Theodore
System: The UNT Digital Library
The application of the statistical theory of extreme values to gust-load problems (open access)

The application of the statistical theory of extreme values to gust-load problems

From Introduction: "Recent developments in the statistical theory of extreme values (references 4 to 10) have indicated a somewhat more rational approach to the problem of predicting the probability of occurrence The present report summarizes some of these findings, indicates the method of application, and evaluates their applicability to certain gust-load problems ."
Date: July 22, 1949
Creator: Press, Harry
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical lift and damping in roll at supersonic speeds of thin sweptback tapered wings with streamwise tips, subsonic leading edges, and supersonic trailing edges (open access)

Theoretical lift and damping in roll at supersonic speeds of thin sweptback tapered wings with streamwise tips, subsonic leading edges, and supersonic trailing edges

"On the basis of linearized supersonic-flow theory, generalized equations were derived and calculations made for the lift and damping in roll of a limited series of thin sweptback tapered wings. Results are applicable to wings with streamwise tips and for a range of supersonic speeds for which the wing is wholly contained between the Mach cones springing from the wing apex and from the trailing edge of the root section. A further limitation is that the tip Mach lines may not intersect on the wing" (p. 395).
Date: February 15, 1949
Creator: Malvestuto, Frank S., Jr.; Margolis, Kenneth & Ribner, Herbert S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical Stress of Ring-Stiffened Cylinders in Torsion (open access)

Critical Stress of Ring-Stiffened Cylinders in Torsion

"A chart in terms of nondimensional parameters is presented for the theoretical critical stress in torsion of simply supported cylinders stiffened by identical equally spaced rings of zero torsional stiffness. The results are obtained by solving the equation of equilibrium by means of the Galerkin method. Comparison of the theoretical results with experimental results indicates that ring-stiffened cylinders buckle, on the average, at a buckling stress about 15 percent below the theoretical buckling stress" (p. 1).
Date: November 1949
Creator: Stein, Manuel; Sanders, J. Lyell, Jr. & Crate, Harold
System: The UNT Digital Library
On Reflection of Shock Waves from Boundary Layers (open access)

On Reflection of Shock Waves from Boundary Layers

Measurements are presented at Mach numbers from about 1.3 to 1.5 of reflection characteristics and the relative upstream influence of shock waves impinging on a flat surface with both laminar and turbulent boundary layers. The difference between impulse and step waves is discussed and their interaction with the boundary layer is compared. General considerations on the experimental production of shock waves from wedges and cones and examples of reflection of shock waves from supersonic shear layers are also presented.
Date: August 16, 1949
Creator: Liepmann, H. W.; Roshko, A. & Dhawan, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Icing-protection requirements for reciprocating-engine induction system (open access)

Icing-protection requirements for reciprocating-engine induction system

From Summary: "Despite the development of relatively ice-free fuel-metering systems, the widespread use of alternate and heated-air intakes, and the use of alcohol for emergency de-icing, icing of aircraft-engine induction systems is a serious problem. Investigations have been made to study and to combat all phases of this icing problem. From these investigations, criterions for safe operation and for design of new induction systems have been established. The results were obtained from laboratory investigations of carburetor-supercharger combinations, wind-tunnel investigations of air scoops, multicylinder-engine studies, and flight investigations. Characteristics of three forms of ice, impact, throttling, and fuel evaporation were studied."
Date: June 20, 1949
Creator: Coles, Willard D.; Rollin, Vern G. & Mulholland, Donald R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Line-Vortex Theory for Calculation of Supersonic Downwash (open access)

Line-Vortex Theory for Calculation of Supersonic Downwash

"The perturbation field induced by a line vortex in a supersonic stream and the downwash behind a supersonic lifting surface are examined to establish approximate methods for determining the downwash behind supersonic wings. Lifting-lines methods are presented for calculating supersonic downwash. A bent lifting-line method is proposed for computing the downwash field behind swept wings. When applied to triangular wings with subsonic leading edges, this method gives results that, in general, are in good agreement with the exact linearized solution" (p. 635).
Date: April 29, 1949
Creator: Mirels, Harold & Haefeli, Rudolph C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A radar method of calibrating airspeed installations on airplanes in maneuvers at high altitudes and at transonic and supersonic speeds (open access)

A radar method of calibrating airspeed installations on airplanes in maneuvers at high altitudes and at transonic and supersonic speeds

A method of calibrating the static-pressure source of a pitot static airspeed installation on an airplane in level flight, dives, and other maneuvers at high altitude and at transonic and supersonic speeds is described. The method principally involves the use of radar-phototheodolite tracking equipment. The various sources of error in the method are discussed and sample calibrations are included.
Date: August 31, 1949
Creator: Zalovcik, John A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The reversibility theorem for thin airfoils in subsonic and supersonic flow (open access)

The reversibility theorem for thin airfoils in subsonic and supersonic flow

A method introduced by Munk is extended to prove that the light-curve slope of thin wings in either subsonic flow or supersonic flow is the same when the direction of flight of the wing is reversed. It is also shown that the wing reversal does not change the thickness drag, damping-in-roll parameter or the damping-in-pitch parameter.
Date: June 26, 1949
Creator: Brown, Clinton E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equilibrium Operating Performance of Axial-Flow Turbojet Engines by Means of Idealized Analysis (open access)

Equilibrium Operating Performance of Axial-Flow Turbojet Engines by Means of Idealized Analysis

"A method of predicting equilibrium operating performance of turbojet engines has been developed, with the assumption of simple model processes for the components. Results of the analysis are plotted in terms of dimensionless parameters comprising critical engine dimensions and over-all operating variables. This investigation was made of an engine in which the ratio of axial inlet-air velocity to compressor-tip velocity is constant, which approximates turbojet engines with axial-flow compressors" (p. 673).
Date: February 25, 1949
Creator: Sanders, John C. & Chapin, Edward C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plastic Buckling of a Rectangular Plate Under Edge Thrusts (open access)

Plastic Buckling of a Rectangular Plate Under Edge Thrusts

"The fundamental equations for the plastic buckling of a rectangular plate under edge thrusts are developed on the basis of a new set of stress-strain relations for the behavior of a metal in the plastic range. These relations are derived for buckling from a state of uniform compression. The fundamental equation for the buckling of a simply compressed plate together with typical boundary conditions is then developed and the results are applied to calculating the buckling loads of a thin strip, a simply supported plate, and a cruciform section" (p. 1).
Date: 1949
Creator: Handelman, G. H. & Prager, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The development of cambered airfoil sections having favorable lift characteristics at supercritical Mach numbers (open access)

The development of cambered airfoil sections having favorable lift characteristics at supercritical Mach numbers

Several groups of new airfoil sections, designated as the NACA 8-series, are derived analytically to have lift characteristics at supercritical Mach numbers which are favorable in the sense that the abrupt loss of lift, characteristic of the usual airfoil section at Mach numbers above the critical, is avoided. Aerodynamic characteristics determined from two-dimensional wind-tunnel tests at Mach numbers up to approximately 0.9 are presented for each of the derived airfoils. Comparisons are made between the characteristics of these airfoils and the corresponding characteristics of representative NACA 6-series airfoils.
Date: 1949
Creator: Graham, Donald J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An apparatus for varying effective dihedral in flight with application to a study of tolerable dihedral on a conventional fighter airplane (open access)

An apparatus for varying effective dihedral in flight with application to a study of tolerable dihedral on a conventional fighter airplane

From Summary: "An apparatus for varying effective dihedral in flight by means of servo actuation of the ailerons in response to sideslip angle is described. The results of brief flight tests of the apparatus on a conventional fighter airplane are presented and discussed. The results of an investigation employing the apparatus to determine the tolerable (safe for normal fighter operation) range of effective dihedral on the test airplane are presented."
Date: August 24, 1949
Creator: Kauffman, William M.; Liddell, Charles J., Jr.; Smith, Allan & Van Dyke, Rudolph D., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of a Systematic Group of NACA 1-Series Cowlings With and Without Spinners (open access)

Investigation of a Systematic Group of NACA 1-Series Cowlings With and Without Spinners

Report presents the results of an investigation conducted in the Langley propeller research tunnel to study cowling-spinner combinations based on the NACA 1-series nose inlets and to obtain systematic design data for one family of approximately ellipsoidal spinners. In the main part of the investigation, 11 of the related spinners were tested in various combinations with 9 NACA open-nose cowlings, which were also tested without spinners. The effects of location and shape of the spinner, shape of the inner surface of the cowling lip, and operation of a propeller having approximately oval shanks were investigated briefly. In addition, a study was conducted to determine the correct procedure for extrapolating design conditions determined from the low-speed test data to the design conditions at the actual flight Mach number.
Date: 1949
Creator: Nichols, Mark R. & Keith, Arvid L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of source distributions for evaluating theoretical aerodynamics of thin finite wings at supersonic speeds (open access)

Use of source distributions for evaluating theoretical aerodynamics of thin finite wings at supersonic speeds

From Summary: "A series of publications on the source-distribution methods for evaluating the aerodynamics of thin wings at supersonic speeds is summarized, extended, and unified. Included in the first part are the deviations of: (a) the linearized partial-differential equation for unsteady flow at a substantially constant Mach number. b) The source-distribution solution for the perturbation-velocity potential that satisfies the boundary conditions of tangential flow at the surface and in the plane of the wing; and (c) the integral equation for determining the strength and the location of sources to describe the interaction effects (as represented by upwash) of the bottom and top wing surfaces through the region between the finite wing boundary and the foremost Mach wave. The second part deals with steady-state thin-wing problems. The third part of the report approximates the integral equation for unsteady upwash and includes a solution of approximate equation. Expressions are then derived to evaluate the load distributions for time-dependent finite-wing motions."
Date: June 17, 1949
Creator: Evvard, John C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct method of design and stress analysis of rotating disks with temperature gradient (open access)

Direct method of design and stress analysis of rotating disks with temperature gradient

A method is presented for the determination of the contour of disks, typified by those of aircraft gas turbines, to incorporate arbitrary elastic-stress distributions resulting from either centrifugal or combined centrifugal and thermal effects. The specified stress may be radial, tangential, or any combination of the two. Use is made of the finite-difference approach in solving the stress equations, the amount of computation necessary in the evolution of a design being greatly reduced by the judicious selection of point stations by the aid of a design chart. Use of the charts and of a preselected schedule of point stations is also applied to the direct problem of finding the elastic and plastic stress distribution in disks of a given design, thereby effecting a great reduction in the amount of calculation. Illustrative examples are presented to show computational procedures in the determination of a new design and in analyzing an existing design for elastic stress and for stresses resulting from plastic flow.
Date: April 4, 1949
Creator: Manson, S. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Constant-Pressure Combustion Charts Including Effects of Diluent Addition (open access)

Constant-Pressure Combustion Charts Including Effects of Diluent Addition

"Charts are presented for the calculation of (a) the final temperatures and the temperature changes involved in constant-pressure combustion processes of air and in products of combustion of air and hydrocarbon fuels, and (b) the quantity of hydrocarbon fuels required in order to attain a specified combustion temperature when water, alcohol, water-alcohol mixtures, liquid ammonia, liquid carbon dioxide, liquid nitrogen, liquid oxygen, or their mixtures are added to air as diluents or refrigerants. The ideal combustion process and combustion with incomplete heat release from the primary fuel and from combustible diluents are considered" (p. 1).
Date: 1949
Creator: Turner, L. Richard & Bogart, Donald
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of section data on trailing-edge high-lift devices (open access)

Summary of section data on trailing-edge high-lift devices

"A summary has been made of available data on the characteristics of airfoil sections with trailing-edge high-lift devices. Data for plain, split, and slotted flaps are collected and analyzed. The effects of each of the variables involved in the design of the various types of flap are examined and, in cases where sufficient data are given, optimum configurations are deduced. Wherever possible, the effects of airfoil section, Reynolds number, and leading-edge roughness are shown. For single and double slotted flaps, where a large amount of unrelated data are available, maximum lift coefficients of many configurations are presented in tables" (p. 1).
Date: 1949
Creator: Cahill, Jones F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical characteristics in supersonic flow of two types of control surfaces on triangular wings (open access)

Theoretical characteristics in supersonic flow of two types of control surfaces on triangular wings

From Summary :"Methods based on the linearized theory for supersonic flow were used to find the characteristics of two types of control surfaces on thin triangular wings. The first type, the constant-chord partial-span flap, was considered to extend either outboard from the center of the wing or inboard from the wing tip. The second type, the full-triangular-tip flap, was treated only for the case in which the Mach number component normal to the leading edge is supersonic. For each type, expressions were found for the lift, rolling-moment, pitching-moment, and hinge-moment characteristics."
Date: 1949
Creator: Tucker, Warren A. & Nelson, Robert L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The design of low-turbulence wind tunnels (open access)

The design of low-turbulence wind tunnels

From Summary: "Within the past 10 years there have been placed in operation in the United States four low-turbulence wind tunnels of moderate cross-sectional area and speed, one at the National Bureau of Standards, two at the NACA Langley Laboratory, and one at the NACA Ames Laboratory. This paper reviews briefly the state of knowledge and those features which make possible the attainment of low turbulence in wind tunnels. Specific applications to two wind tunnels are described."
Date: 1949
Creator: Dryden, Hugh L. & Abbott, Ira H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A simplified method for the determination and analysis of the neutral-lateral-oscillatory-stability boundary (open access)

A simplified method for the determination and analysis of the neutral-lateral-oscillatory-stability boundary

A necessary condition for neutral oscillatory stability is that Routh's discriminant r, formed from the coefficients of the stability equation, is equal to zero. Computations obtained from rsub1=0 and d=0 show very good agreement with the results calculated by the expression for r=0. The nature of the modes of motion as a function of the directional-stability derivative and the effective-dihedral derivative is discussed in detail.
Date: 1949
Creator: Sternfield, Leonard & Gates, Ordway B., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heat transfer to bodies traveling at high speed in the upper atmosphere (open access)

Heat transfer to bodies traveling at high speed in the upper atmosphere

A general method has been developed, using the methods of kinetic theory, whereby the surface temperatures of bodies can be calculated for steady flight at any speed in a rarefied gas. The particular solution was made for a flat plate; however, the calculations can be easily extended to bodies of arbitrary shape.
Date: 1949
Creator: Stalder, Jackson R. & Jukoff, David
System: The UNT Digital Library