Solutions of Blunt-body Stagnation-region Flows with Nongray Emission and Absorption of Radiation by a Time-asymptotic Technique


Book Description

A second-order time-asymptotic solution to radiation-coupled stagnation-region flows is presented. The solution is applied to the hypervelocity flow over blunt vehicles of inviscid, nonconducting, equilibrium air, emitting and absorbing nongray radiation. Velocities, nose radii, and altitudes covered by the analysis are sufficient to bracket reentry trajectories of current interest. Radiative heat-transfer rates for the range of interest and typical profiles of pressure, density, enthalpy, temperature, and velocity are shown. The nature of time-asymptotic solution is discussed and it is shown o be a feasible means of achieving second-order accurate solutions to radiation-coupled shock-layer flows. Step-function models of the absorption coefficient are used in order to evaluate the divergence of the radiation flux vector. An analysis is carried out to determine what effect variations in the spectral complexity of the step model absorption coefficients used in the analysis will have on the thermodynamic and flow profiles of interest and on the nongray radiative heat-transfer rates. In this connection use is made of consistent model absorption coefficients having one to nine spectral steps with free-free, free-bound (including atomic line transitions), and molecular transitions taken into account. Relatively simple models of the absorption coefficient can be used with no significant loss of accuracy. An existing correlation for the cooling factor, the ratio of the radiation heat-transfer rate to the adiabatic radiation heat-transfer rate, is extended to larger velocities than heretofore considered.







NASA Technical Note


Book Description







Inviscid Radiating Shock Layers about Spheres Traveling at Hyperbolic Speeds in Air


Book Description

Time-dependent finite-difference techniques are used to obtain numerical solutions for the problem of the inviscid flow of radiating equilibrium air past sphere traveling at hyperbolic speeds. The effects of absorption are included, and results are presented for both gray and nongray absorption coefficient models for spheres with different radii. It is shown that the nondimensional heat-flux distributions for the gray and nongray models are similar and that these distributions are weak functions of the radius of the sphere and the altitude and strong functions of the flight velocity.













Super- and Hypersonic Aerodynamics and Heat Transfer


Book Description

Recent government and commercial efforts to develop orbital and suborbital passenger and transport aircraft have resulted in a burgeoning of new research. The articles in this book, translated from Russian, were contributed by the world's leading authorities on supersonic and hypersonic flows and heat transfer. This superb book addresses the physics and engineering aspects of ultra high-speed aerodynamic problems. Thorough coverage is given to an array of specific problem-solving equations. Super- and Hypersonic Aerodynamics and Heat Transfer will be essential reading for all aeronautical engineers, mechanical engineers, mathematicians, and physicists involved in this exciting field of research.