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A New Simple Interferometer for Obtaining Quantitatively Evaluable Flow Patterns (open access)

A New Simple Interferometer for Obtaining Quantitatively Evaluable Flow Patterns

"The method described in the present report makes it possible to obtain interferometer records with the aid of any one of the available Schlieren optics by the addition of very simple expedients, which fundamentally need not to be inferior to those obtained by other methods, such as the Mach-Zehnder interferometer, for example. The method is based on the fundamental concept of the phase-contrast process developed by Zernike, but which in principle has been enlarged to such an extent that it practically represents an independent interference method for general applications. Moreover, the method offers the possibility, in case of necessity, of superposing any apparent wedge field on the density field to be gauged" (p. 1).
Date: November 1953
Creator: Erdmann, S. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Concerning the Flow on Ring-Shaped Cowlings Part 13: The Influence of a Projecting Hub (open access)

Concerning the Flow on Ring-Shaped Cowlings Part 13: The Influence of a Projecting Hub

"The influence of thickness and length of a hub projecting from an inlet opening was investigated on one of the two new classes of circular cowls reported in NACA TM 1360" (p. 1).
Date: October 1953
Creator: Küchemann, Dietrich
System: The UNT Digital Library
Concerning the Flow About Ring-Shaped Cowlings 12: Two New Classes of Circular Cowls (open access)

Concerning the Flow About Ring-Shaped Cowlings 12: Two New Classes of Circular Cowls

"For application in practice for annular radiator fairings and similar arrangements, two new classes of circular cowls are developed by theoretical method, and investigated in a systematic test series regarding their behavior under various working conditions" (p. 1).
Date: October 1953
Creator: Küchemann, Dietrich & Weber, Johanna
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air-Water Analogy and the Study of Hydraulic Models (open access)

Air-Water Analogy and the Study of Hydraulic Models

From Summary: "The author first sets forth some observations about the theory of models. Then he established certain general criteria for the construction of dynamically similar models in water and in air, through reference to the perfect fluid equations and to the ones pertaining to viscous flow. It is, in addition, pointed out that there are more cases in which the analogy is possible than is commonly supposed."
Date: July 1953
Creator: Supino, Giulio
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of the Shape of a Two-Dimensional Supersonic Nozzle in Closed Form (open access)

Calculation of the Shape of a Two-Dimensional Supersonic Nozzle in Closed Form

"The idea is advanced of making a supersonic nozzle by producing one, two, or three successive turns of the whole flow; with the result that the wall contour can be calculated exactly by means of the Prandtl-Meyer "Lost Solution" (p. 1).
Date: January 1953
Creator: Cunsolo, Dante
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air Admixture to Exhaust Jets (open access)

Air Admixture to Exhaust Jets

From Introduction: "The problem of thrust increase for jet engines by air mixture to the exhaust jet was introduced into aviation techniques by the suggestions of Melot (ref.1). Due to a too general interpretation of several theoretical investigations of A. Busemann (ref.2), so far no practical use has been made of these suggestions. The following considerations show that, in the case of low-pressure mixing according to Melot's suggestions, probably no thrust increase of technical significance will occur for the flight speeds of interest (however, the low-pressure mixture is highly promising for ground test setups and for special power plants of relatively slow sea and land vehicles."
Date: July 1953
Creator: Sänger, Eugen
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the Supersonic Propeller (open access)

Study of the Supersonic Propeller

In this paper a propeller having all sections operating at supersonic speeds is designated a supersonic propeller regardless of flight speed. Analyses assume subsonic flight speeds but very high rotational speeds. A very elementary analysis of the efficiency of a jet-propeller system is presented. A propeller analysis based on conventional vortex blade element theory is presented and reduced to a single point method which leads to an expression for optimum advance ratio in terms of hub-tip diameter ratio and airfoil fineness ratio.
Date: March 1953
Creator: Fabri, Jean & Siestrunck, Raymond
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Problems on the Theory of Creep (open access)

Some Problems on the Theory of Creep

"The term creep of metals is applied to the phenomenon in which, at temperatures beyond a certain limit, the metal subjected to a load slowly undergoes deformation with time. Very slow deformations for a prolonged period are cumulative and lead either to inadmissible changes in the dimensions of a structural part or to its failure. The theory of creep constitutes part of the mechanics of dense media and the mechanical formulation of the problem may be given as the following: a body is subjected to the action of a given system of forces, or initial displacements are prescribed on its surface" (p. 1).
Date: April 1953
Creator: Rabotnov, Y. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Microstructure of Turbulent Flow (open access)

The Microstructure of Turbulent Flow

"In 1941 a general theory of locally isotropic turbulence was proposed by Kolmogoroff which permitted the prediction of a number of laws of turbulent flow for large Reynolds numbers. The most important of these laws, the dependence of the mean square of the difference in velocities at two points on their distance and the dependence of the coefficient of turbulence diffusion on the scale of the phenomenon, were obtained by both Kolmogoroff and Obukhoff in the same year. At the present time these laws have been experimentally confirmed by direct measurements carried out in aerodynamic wind tunnels in the laboratory, in the atmosphere, and also on the ocean" (p. 1).
Date: June 1953
Creator: Obukhoff, A. M. & Yaglom, A. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Theory of the Turbulent Boundary Layer (open access)

On the Theory of the Turbulent Boundary Layer

As a rule, a division of the turbulent boundary layer is admissible: a division into a part near the wall, where the flow is governed only by the wall effects, and into an outer part, where the wall roughness and the viscosity of the flow medium affects only the wall shearing stress occurring as boundary condition but does not exert any other influence on the flow. Both parts may be investigated to a large extent independently. . The theoretical considerations give a cue how to set up, by appropriate experiments and their evaluation, generally valid connections which are required for the approximate calculation of the turbulent boundary layer according to the momentum and energy theorem.
Date: February 1953
Creator: Rotta, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Steady Vibrations of Wing of Circular Plan Form and Theory of Wing of Circular Plan Form (open access)

Steady Vibrations of Wing of Circular Plan Form and Theory of Wing of Circular Plan Form

This paper treats the problem of determining the lift, moment, and induced drag of a thin wing of circular plan form in uniform incompressible flow on the basis of linearized theory. As contrasted to a similar paper by Kinner, in which the acceleration potential method was used, the present paper utilizes the concept of the velocity potential. Calculations of the lift and moment are presented for several deformed shapes.
Date: January 1953
Creator: Kochin, N. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supersaturation in the Spontaneous Formation of Nuclei in Water Vapor (open access)

Supersaturation in the Spontaneous Formation of Nuclei in Water Vapor

"According to experience, a certain supersaturation is required for condensation of water vapor in the homogeneous phase; that is, for inception of the condensation, at a prescribed temperature, the water vapor partial pressure must lie above the saturation pressure. The condensation starts on so-called condensation nuclei. Solid or liquid suspended particles may serve as nuclei; these particles may either a priori be present in the gas phase (dust, soot), or may spontaneously be formed from the vapor molecules to be condensed themselves" (p. 1).
Date: November 1953
Creator: Sander, Adolf & Damköhler, Gerhard
System: The UNT Digital Library