AeroBasics PDF
AeroBasics PDF
AeroBasics PDF
Basics of Flight
Flight History
Firstflight: The Wright Flyer 1903
Break Speed of Sound: Bell X-1A 1947
Land on Moon: Apollo 11 1969
Circumnavigate Earth on one tank of
gas: Global Flyer 2005
Weve come a long way
Major Topics
SR-71: Low AR
6 degrees of freedom
Three axes of an aircraft
Longitudinal: Parallel to the fuselage
Lateral: Parallel to the wing
2.4
Re=61000
2
Re=101600
1.6 Re=122600
Re=147400
1.2 Re=171400
Cl
0.8 Re=198100
Re=251900
0.4 Re=302200
Re=149500
0
Re=198900
-0.4
-10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25
Pressure Gradient
Newton and Bernoulli
A wing forces air down
Thus air forces a wing
up
A change in the
momentum of the fluid
results in a force
Air in motion creates a
pressure difference
around the wing
Air being forced down
Coanda Effect
Tendency of a fluid
in motion to stick to
an object
Due to skin friction
between fluid and
surface
The top of the wing
also directs air down
Experiment with a
rolled up paper.
3-D effects of lift
Spanwise flow
High pressure on
bottom
Low pressure on
top
Air from bottom
tries to move to
top Wing Tip Vortex
Return to the lift equation
Lift = * p * V^2 * A * Cl
Lift can be explained by the pressure
gradient as indicated by the equation
The gradient cannot solely be explained
by air moving faster over the top of the
wing
What about this Cl factor????
Coefficient of Lift
Magic number of lift;
determined
experimentally
Constant for any size
wing with same airfoil
Accounts for unknowns
Varies with angle of
attack
There is an angle where
the wing produces zero
lift
Explains how a wing
can fly upside down
Loss of Lift: Stall
Every wing has a stall angle
Stall angle is the angle of attack at
which the wing loses lift
Stall angle range from 12-20 degrees
What actually causes a stall???
Stall at high AoA
Boundary layer
separates from the
surface (inertial vs
viscous effects)
Effectively changes
wing shape
Turbulence results
that causes more
drag and less lift
Drag:
Form Drag: shape of object
Skin Friction Drag: surface of object
Induced Drag: component of lift
Parasitic Drag = Form Drag + Skin Drag
Total Drag = Induced Drag + Parasitic Drag
Total Drag = * p * V^2 * A * Cd
Cdis the key and is determined
experimentally just like Cl.
Form and Skin Friction Drag
Form Drag
Greatly affects slow flying planes
Depends upon the frontal area
Depends upon how streamlined
What does it mean to be streamlined??
Examples of things that are streamlined
Skin Friction
Depends upon the surface roughness
Form Drag
How do we know if an object is
streamlined?
Nature,
wind tunnel testing, conformal
mapping
3rd Place