A Method for Calculating Transient Surface Temperatures and Surface Heating Rates for High-speed Aircraft


Book Description

This report describes a method that can calculate transient aerodynamic heating and transient surface temperatures at supersonic and hypersonic speeds. This method can rapidly calculate temperature and heating rate time-histories for complete flight trajectories. Semi-empirical theories are used to calculate laminar and turbulent heat transfer coefficients and a procedure for estimating boundary-layer transition is included. Results from this method are compared with flight data from the X-15 research vehicle, YF-12 airplane, and the Space Shuttle Orbiter. These comparisons show that the calculated values are in good agreement with the measured flight data.




NASA Technical Note


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Local Heat Transfer and Recovery Temperatures on a Yawed Cylinder at a Mach Number of 4.15 and High Reynolds Numbers


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Design studies of hypersonic lifting vehicles have generally indicated that aerodynamic heating may be reduced by using highly swept configurations with blunted leading edges. For laminar boundary layers the effect of sweep angle A on the heat transfer at the leading edge is usually taken as cos A as shown by the data of Feller (ref. 1) who measured the average heat transfer on the front half of a swept cylinder. More recent data (refs. 2 and 3) have indicated that the effect of sweep may be more nearly cos3/2 Lambda which, at a sweep angle of 75 deg, would result in a 50-percent reduction of the heat transfer predicted by the cos A variation. The data and theory of reference 4 also indicate a cos3/2 lambda variation but the theories of references 5 and 6 indicate a variation somewhere between cos A and cos3/2 lambda for large stream Mach numbers. The data of reference 7, in contrast to the investigations just cited, showed large increases in average heat transfer to a circular leading edge with increasing A up to a lambda of about 40 deg. These increases in heat transfer were probably caused by transition to turbulent flow which apparently resulted primarily from the inherent instability of the three-dimensional boundary layer flow on a yawed cylinder. The leading-edge Reynolds numbers of reference 7 were considerably larger than the values in references 1 to 4 and were also larger than typical values for full-scale leading edges of hypersonic vehicles; hence, the main application of the high Reynolds number tests will probably be to bodies at angle of attack.










NASA Technical Report


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Reports and Memoranda


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Beginning with no. 650 each hundredth number contains a list of the Reports and memoranda published since the last list.







Experimental Heat-transfer Distributions on a Blunt Lifting Body at Mach 3.71


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The composite body consisted of a spherical nose segment, a delta-slab upper surface with blunt leading edges, wedge sides, and a conical lower surface. The tests were conducted both with and without roughness on the model for a range of angle of attack up to 400. Included is a complete tabulation of the experimental heatii rates and a discussion of the more significant findings.