Effect of Roughness on Properties of Airfoils


Book Description

The first group of a large series of contemplated experiments on the effect of roughness was intended to show the effect of great roughness on airfoils of various sizes and attitudes.




Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports


Book Description

Lists citations with abstracts for aerospace related reports obtained from world wide sources and announces documents that have recently been entered into the NASA Scientific and Technical Information Database.







Proceedings of the 2nd International Seminar on Aeronautics and Energy


Book Description

This book consists of selected peer-reviewed papers from the 2nd International Seminar on Aeronautics and Energy (ISAE 2022) focusing on the theme to revive the aviation industry post-COVID-19 pandemic. The topics discussed in this book include aircraft design and optimization, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation and experimental aerodynamics, aircraft structure and aeroelasticity, guidance control and navigation, aircraft manufacturing and health monitoring avionics and system integration of UAV/drones, SITL AND HITL application on drones, rockets and missile, industrial wind engineering, green fuel and aviation sustainability, and aviation management. This book is a valuable resource for academicians and industry players in the field of aviation and sustainability.










Theoretical and Experimental Investigation of the Aerodynamic Properties of Airfoils Near Stall in a Two


Book Description

A theoretical method, which requires the use of a digital computer, was developed to predict pressure distributions on an airfoil in an inviscid two-dimensional monuniformly sheared flow. The theory is applicable to airfoils of arbitrary profile and to nonuniformly sheared flows which can be represented by segments with linear velocity profiles. To test the developed theory, aerodynamic characteristics of an airfoil were investigated both theoretically and experimentally in a relatively simple two-dimensional nonuniformly sheared flow consisting of two segments with shears of equal magnitude but of opposite sign. Agreement between computed and experimental pressure distributions was good and on the basis of these results, a mechanism is postulated by which the large variations in lift previously observed in a two-dimensional nonuniformly sheared flow can occur. (Author).