Курсовая работа: Airfoils and Lift
Курсовая работа: Airfoils and Lift
Airfoils
and Lift
The angle
of incidence is measured by the angle at which the wing is attached to the
fuselage.
An airfoil is
a device which gets a useful reaction from air moving over its surface. When an
airfoil is moved through the air, it is capable of producing lift. Wings,
horizontal tail surfaces, vertical tails surfaces, and propellers are all
examples of airfoils.
Generally the
wing of small aircraft will look like the cross-section of the figure above.
The forward part of an airfoil is rounded and is called the leading edge. The
aft part is narrow and tapered and is called the trailing edge. A reference
line often used in discussing airfoils is the chord, an imaginary straight line
joining the extremities of the leading and trailing edges.
Angle of
Incidence: The angle of incidence is the angle formed by the longitudinal axis of
the airplane and the chord of the wing. The longitudinal axis is an imaginary
line that extends lengthwise through the fuselage from nose to tail. The angle
of incidence is measured by the angle at which the wing is attached to the
fuselage. The angle of incidence is fixed --it normally cannot be changed by
the pilot. (An exception
is the Vought F8U Crusader.)
Bernoulli's
Principle: To understand how lift is produced, we must examine a phenomenon
discovered many years ago by the scientist Bernoulli and later called
Bernoulli's Principle: The pressure of a fluid (liquid or gas) decreases at
points where the speed of the fluid increases. In other words, Bernoulli found
that within the same fluid, in this case air, high speed flow is associated with
low pressure, and low speed flow with high pressure. This principle was first
used to explain changes in the pressure of fluid flowing within a pipe whose
cross-sectional area varied. In the wide section of the gradually narrowing
pipe, the fluid moves at low speed, producing high pressure. As the pipe
narrows it must contain the same amount of fluid. In this narrow section, the
fluid moves at high speed, producing low pressure.
An
important application of this phenomenon is made in giving lift to the wing of
an airplane, an airfoil. The airfoil is designed to increase the velocity of
the airflow above its surface, thereby decreasing pressure above the airfoil.
Simultaneously, the impact of the air on the lower surface of the airfoil
increases the pressure below. This combination of pressure decrease above and
increase below produces lift.
Lift:
Probably
you have held your flattened hand out of the window of a moving automobile. As
you inclined your hand to the wind, the force of air pushed against it forcing
your hand to rise. The airfoil (in this case, your hand) was deflecting the
wind which, in turn, created an equal and opposite dynamic pressure on the
lower surface of the airfoil, forcing it up and back. The upward component of
this force is lift; the backward component is drag.
Pressure
is reduced is due to the smaller space the air has above the wing than below.
Air cannot go through the wing, so it must push around it. The surface air
molecules push between the wing and outer layers of air. Due to the bump of the
airfoil, the space is smaller and the molecules must go faster. According to Bernoulli's
Law, faster air has lower air pressure, and thus the high pressure beneath the
wing pushes up to cause lift.
How
Airplanes Fly: A Physical Description of Lift c
David Anderson
Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory
Batavia IL
60510
dfa@fnal.gov
&
Scott Eberhardt
Dept. of
Aeronautics and Astronautics
University of
Washington
Seattle WA
91895-2400
scott@aa.washington.edu
Almost
everyone today has flown in an airplane. Many ask the simple question
"what makes an airplane fly"? The answer one frequently gets is
misleading and often just plain wrong. We hope that the answers provided here
will clarify many misconceptions about lift and that you will adopt our
explanation when explaining lift to others. We are going to show you that lift
is easier to understand if one starts with Newton rather than Bernoulli. We
will also show you that the popular explanation that most of us were taught is
misleading at best and that lift is due to the wing diverting air down.
Let
us start by defining three descriptions of lift commonly used in textbooks and
training manuals. The first we will call the Mathematical Aerodynamics
Description which is used by aeronautical engineers. This description uses
complex mathematics and/or computer simulations to calculate the lift of a
wing. These are design tools which are powerful for computing lift but do not
lend themselves to an intuitive understanding of flight.
The
second description we will call the Popular Explanation which is based on the
Bernoulli principle. The primary advantage of this description is that it is
easy to understand and has been taught for many years. Because of its
simplicity, it is used to describe lift in most flight training manuals. The
major disadvantage is that it relies on the "principle of equal transit
times" which is wrong. This description focuses on the shape of the wing
and prevents one from understanding such important phenomena as inverted
flight, power, ground effect, and the dependence of lift on the angle of attack
of the wing.
The
third description, which we are advocating here, we will call the Physical
Description of lift. This description is based primarily on Newton’s laws. The
physical description is useful for understanding flight, and is accessible to
all who are curious. Little math is needed to yield an estimate of many
phenomena associated with flight. This description gives a clear, intuitive
understanding of such phenomena as the power curve, ground effect, and
high-speed stalls. However, unlike the mathematical aerodynamics description,
the physical description has no design or simulation capabilities.
The popular explanation of lift
Students of
physics and aerodynamics are taught that airplanes fly as a result of
Bernoulli’s principle, which says that if air speeds up the pressure is
lowered. Thus a wing generates lift because the air goes faster over the top
creating a region of low pressure, and thus lift. This explanation usually
satisfies the curious and few challenge the conclusions. Some may wonder why
the air goes faster over the top of the wing and this is where the popular
explanation of lift falls apart.
In
order to explain why the air goes faster over the top of the wing, many have
resorted to the geometric argument that the distance the air must travel is
directly related to its speed. The usual claim is that when the air separates
at the leading edge, the part that goes over the top must converge at the
trailing edge with the part that goes under the bottom. This is the so-called
"principle of equal transit times".
As
discussed by Gail Craig (Stop Abusing Bernoulli! How Airplanes Really Fly,
Regenerative Press, Anderson, Indiana, 1997), let us assume that this argument
were true. The average speeds of the air over and under the wing are easily
determined because we can measure the distances and thus the speeds can be
calculated. From Bernoulli’s principle, we can then determine the pressure
forces and thus lift. If we do a simple calculation we would find that in order
to generate the required lift for a typical small airplane, the distance over
the top of the wing must be about 50% longer than under the bottom. Figure 1
shows what such an airfoil would look like. Now, imagine what a Boeing 747 wing
would have to look like!
Fig
1 Shape of wing predicted by principle of equal transit time.
If
we look at the wing of a typical small plane, which has a top surface that is
1.5 - 2.5% longer than the bottom, we discover that a Cessna 172 would have to
fly at over 400 mph to generate enough lift. Clearly, something in this
description of lift is flawed.
But,
who says the separated air must meet at the trailing edge at the same time?
Figure 2 shows the airflow over a wing in a simulated wind tunnel. In the
simulation, colored smoke is introduced periodically. One can see that the air
that goes over the top of the wing gets to the trailing edge considerably
before the air that goes under the wing. In fact, close inspection shows that
the air going under the wing is slowed down from the "free-stream"
velocity of the air. So
much for the principle of equal transit times.
Fig
2 Simulation of the airflow over a wing in a wind tunnel, with colored "smoke"
to show the acceleration and deceleration of the air.
The
popular explanation also implies that inverted flight is impossible. It
certainly does not address acrobatic airplanes, with symmetric wings (the top
and bottom surfaces are the same shape), or how a wing adjusts for the great
changes in load such as when pulling out of a dive or in a steep turn.
So,
why has the popular explanation prevailed for so long? One answer is that the
Bernoulli principle is easy to understand. There is nothing wrong with the
Bernoulli principle, or with the statement that the air goes faster over the
top of the wing. But, as the above discussion suggests, our understanding is
not complete with this explanation. The problem is that we are missing a vital
piece when we apply Bernoulli’s principle. We can calculate the pressures
around the wing if we know the speed of the air over and under the wing, but
how do we determine the speed?
Another
fundamental shortcoming of the popular explanation is that it ignores the work
that is done. Lift requires power (which is work per time). As will be seen
later, an understanding of power is key to the understanding of many of the
interesting phenomena of lift.
Newton’s laws and lift
So, how does a
wing generate lift? To begin to understand lift we must return to high school
physics and review Newton’s first and third laws. (We will introduce Newton’s
second law a little later.) Newton’s first law states a body at rest will
remain at rest, and a body in motion will continue in straight-line motion
unless subjected to an external applied force. That means, if one sees a
bend in the flow of air, or if air originally at rest is accelerated into
motion, there is a force acting on it. Newton’s third law states that for
every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. As an example, an
object sitting on a table exerts a force on the table (its weight) and the
table puts an equal and opposite force on the object to hold it up. In order to
generate lift a wing must do something to the air. What the wing does to the
air is the action while lift is the reaction.
Let’s
compare two figures used to show streams of air (streamlines) over a wing. In
figure 3 the air comes straight at the wing, bends around it, and then leaves
straight behind the wing. We have all seen similar pictures, even in flight
manuals. But, the air leaves the wing exactly as it appeared ahead of the wing.
There is no net action on the air so there can be no lift! Figure 4 shows the
streamlines, as they should be drawn. The air passes over the wing and is bent
down. The bending of the air is the action. The reaction is the lift on the
wing.
Fig
3 Common depiction of airflow over a wing. This wing has no lift.
Fig
4 True airflow over a wing with lift, showing upwash and downwash.
The wing as a pump
As Newton’s
laws suggest, the wing must change something of the air to get lift. Changes in
the air’s momentum will result in forces on the wing. To generate lift a wing
must divert air down, lots of air.
The
lift of a wing is equal to the change in momentum of the air it diverts down.
Momentum is the product of mass and velocity. The lift of a wing is
proportional to the amount of air diverted down times the downward velocity of
that air. Its that simple. (Here we have used an alternate form of Newton’s
second law that relates the acceleration of an object to its mass and to the
force on it, F=ma) For more lift the wing can either divert more air (mass) or
increase its downward velocity. This downward velocity behind the wing is
called "downwash". Figure 5 shows how the downwash appears to the
pilot (or in a wind tunnel). The figure also shows how the downwash appears to
an observer on the ground watching the wing go by. To the pilot the air is
coming off the wing at roughly the angle of attack. To the observer on the
ground, if he or she could see the air, it would be coming off the wing almost
vertically. The greater the angle of attack, the greater the vertical velocity.
Likewise, for the same angle of attack, the greater the speed of the wing the
greater the vertical velocity. Both the increase in the speed and the increase
of the angle of attack increase the length of the vertical arrow. It is this
vertical velocity that gives the wing lift.
Fig
5 How downwash appears to a pilot and to an observer on the ground.
As
stated, an observer on the ground would see the air going almost straight down
behind the plane. This can be demonstrated by observing the tight column of air
behind a propeller, a household fan, or under the rotors of a helicopter, all
of which are rotating wings. If the air were coming off the blades at an angle
the air would produce a cone rather than a tight column. If a plane were to fly
over a very large scale, the scale would register the weight of the plane.
If
we estimate the average vertical component of the downwash of a Cessna 172
traveling at 110 knots to be about 9 knots, then to generate the needed 2,300
lbs of lift the wing pumps a whopping 2.5 ton/sec of air! In fact, as will be
discussed later, this estimate may be as much as a factor of two too low. The
amount of air pumped down for a Boeing 747 to create lift for its roughly
800,000 pounds takeoff weight is incredible indeed.
Pumping,
or diverting, so much air down is a strong argument against lift being just a
surface effect as implied by the popular explanation. In fact, in order to pump
2.5 ton/sec the wing of the Cessna 172 must accelerate all of the air within 9
feet above the wing. (Air weighs about 2 pounds per cubic yard at sea level.)
Figure 6 illustrates the effect of the air being diverted down from a wing. A
huge hole is punched through the fog by the downwash from the airplane that has
just flown over it.
So
how does a thin wing divert so much air? When the air is bent around the top of
the wing, it pulls on the air above it accelerating that air down, otherwise
there would be voids in the air left above the wing. Air is pulled from above
to prevent voids. This pulling causes the pressure to become lower above the
wing. It is the acceleration of the air above the wing in the downward
direction that gives lift. (Why the wing bends the air with enough force to
generate lift will be discussed in the next section.)
As
seen in figure 4, a complication in the picture of a wing is the effect of
"upwash" at the leading edge of the wing. As the wing moves along,
air is not only diverted down at the rear of the wing, but air is pulled up at
the leading edge. This upwash actually contributes to negative lift and more
air must be diverted down to compensate for it. This will be discussed later
when we consider ground effect.
Normally,
one looks at the air flowing over the wing in the frame of reference of the
wing. In other words, to the pilot the air is moving and the wing is standing
still. We have already stated that an observer on the ground would see the air
coming off the wing almost vertically. But what is the air doing above and
below the wing? Figure 7 shows an instantaneous snapshot of how air molecules are
moving as a wing passes by. Remember in this figure the air is initially at
rest and it is the wing moving. Ahead of the leading edge, air is moving up
(upwash). At the trailing edge, air is diverted down (downwash). Over the top
the air is accelerated towards the trailing edge. Underneath, the air is
accelerated forward slightly, if at all.
Fig
7 Direction of air movement around a wing as seen by an observer on the ground.
In
the mathematical aerodynamics description of lift this rotation of the air
around the wing gives rise to the "bound vortex" or
"circulation" model. The advent of this model, and the complicated
mathematical manipulations associated with it, leads to the direct
understanding of forces on a wing. But, the mathematics required typically
takes students in aerodynamics some time to master.
One
observation that can be made from figure 7 is that the top surface of the wing
does much more to move the air than the bottom. So the top is the more critical
surface. Thus, airplanes can carry external stores, such as drop tanks, under
the wings but not on top where they would interfere with lift. That is also why
wing struts under the wing are common but struts on the top of the wing have
been historically rare. A strut, or any obstruction, on the top of the wing
would interfere with the lift.
Air has viscosity
The natural
question is "how does the wing divert the air down?" When a moving
fluid, such as air or water, comes into contact with a curved surface it will
try to follow that surface. To demonstrate this effect, hold a water glass
horizontally under a faucet such that a small stream of water just touches the
side of the glass. Instead of flowing straight down, the presence of the glass
causes the water to wrap around the glass as is shown in figure 8. This
tendency of fluids to follow a curved surface is known as the Coanda effect.
From Newton’s first law we know that for the fluid to bend there must be a force
acting on it. From Newton’s third law we know that the fluid must put an equal
and opposite force on the object that caused the fluid to bend.
Fig
8 Coanda effect.
Why
should a fluid follow a curved surface? The answer is viscosity: the resistance
to flow which also gives the air a kind of "stickiness." Viscosity in
air is very small but it is enough for the air molecules to want to stick to
the surface. The relative velocity between the surface and the nearest air
molecules is exactly zero. (That is why one cannot hose the dust off of a car
and why there is dust on the backside of the fans in a wind tunnel.) Just above
the surface the fluid has some small velocity. The farther one goes from the
surface the faster the fluid is moving until the external velocity is reached
(note that this occurs in less than an inch). Because the fluid near the
surface has a change in velocity, the fluid flow is bent towards the surface.
Unless the bend is too tight, the fluid will follow the surface. This volume of
air around the wing that appears to be partially stuck to the wing is called
the "boundary layer".
Lift as a function of angle of attack
There are many
types of wing: conventional, symmetric, conventional in inverted flight, the
early biplane wings that looked like warped boards, and even the proverbial
"barn door." In all cases, the wing is forcing the air down, or more
accurately pulling air down from above. What all of these wings have in common
is an angle of attack with respect to the oncoming air. It is this angle of
attack that is the primary parameter in determining lift. The lift of the
inverted wing can be explained by its angle of attack, despite the apparent
contradiction with the popular explanation involving the Bernoulli principle. A
pilot adjusts the angle of attack to adjust the lift for the speed and load.
The popular explanation of lift which focuses on the shape of the wing gives
the pilot only the speed to adjust.
To
better understand the role of the angle of attack it is useful to introduce an
"effective" angle of attack, defined such that the angle of the wing
to the oncoming air that gives zero lift is defined to be zero degrees. If one
then changes the angle of attack both up and down one finds that the lift is
proportional to the angle. Figure 9 shows the coefficient of lift (lift
normalized for the size of the wing) for a typical wing as a function of the
effective angle of attack. A similar lift versus angle of attack relationship
is found for all wings, independent of their design. This is true for the wing
of a 747 or a barn door. The role of the angle of attack is more important than
the details of the airfoil’s shape in understanding lift.
Fig
9 Coefficient of lift versus the effective angle of attack.
Typically,
the lift begins to decrease at an angle of attack of about 15 degrees. The
forces necessary to bend the air to such a steep angle are greater than the
viscosity of the air will support, and the air begins to separate from the
wing. This separation of the airflow from the top of the wing is a stall.
The wing as air "scoop"
We now would
like to introduce a new mental image of a wing. One is used to thinking of a
wing as a thin blade that slices though the air and develops lift somewhat by
magic. The new image that we would like you to adopt is that of the wing as a
scoop diverting a certain amount of air from the horizontal to roughly the
angle of attack, as depicted in figure 10. The scoop can be pictured as an
invisible structure put on the wing at the factory. The length of the scoop is
equal to the length of the wing and the height is somewhat related to the chord
length (distance from the leading edge of the wing to the trailing edge). The
amount of air intercepted by this scoop is proportional to the speed of the
plane and the density of the air, and nothing else.
Fig
10 The wing as a scoop.
As
stated before, the lift of a wing is proportional to the amount of air diverted
down times the vertical velocity of that air. As a plane increases speed, the
scoop diverts more air. Since the load on the wing, which is the weight of the
plane, does not increase the vertical speed of the diverted air must be
decreased proportionately. Thus, the angle of attack is reduced to maintain a
constant lift. When the plane goes higher, the air becomes less dense so the
scoop diverts less air for the same speed. Thus, to compensate the angle of
attack must be increased. The concepts of this section will be used to
understand lift in a way not possible with the popular explanation.
Lift requires power
When a plane
passes overhead the formerly still air ends up with a downward velocity. Thus,
the air is left in motion after the plane leaves. The air has been given
energy. Power is energy, or work, per time. So, lift must require power. This
power is supplied by the airplane’s engine (or by gravity and thermals for a
sailplane).
How
much power will we need to fly? The power needed for lift is the work (energy)
per unit time and so is proportional to the amount of air diverted down times
the velocity squared of that diverted air. We have already stated that the lift
of a wing is proportional to the amount of air diverted down times the downward
velocity of that air. Thus, the power needed to lift the airplane is
proportional to the load (or weight) times the vertical velocity of the air.
If the speed of the plane is doubled the amount of air diverted down doubles.
Thus the angle of attack must be reduced to give a vertical velocity that is
half the original to give the same lift. The power required for lift has been
cut in half. This shows that the power required for lift becomes less as the
airplane's speed increases. In fact, we have shown that this power to create
lift is proportional to one over the speed of the plane.
But,
we all know that to go faster (in cruise) we must apply more power. So there
must be more to power than the power required for lift. The power associated
with lift, described above, is often called the "induced" power.
Power is also needed to overcome what is called "parasitic" drag,
which is the drag associated with moving the wheels, struts, antenna, etc.
through the air. The energy the airplane imparts to an air molecule on impact
is proportional to the speed squared. The number of molecules struck per time
is proportional to the speed. Thus the parasitic power required to overcome
parasitic drag increases as the speed cubed.
Figure
11 shows the power curves for induced power, parasitic power, and total power
which is the sum of induced power and parasitic power. Again, the induced power
goes as one over the speed and the parasitic power goes as the speed cubed. At
low speed the power requirements of flight are dominated by the induced power.
The slower one flies the less air is diverted and thus the angle of attack must
be increased to maintain lift. Pilots practice flying on the "backside of
the power curve" so that they recognize that the angle of attack and the
power required to stay in the air at very low speeds are considerable.
Fig
11 Power requirements versus speed.
At
cruise, the power requirement is dominated by parasitic power. Since this goes
as the speed cubed an increase in engine size gives one a faster rate of climb
but does little to improve the cruise speed of the plane.
Since
we now know how the power requirements vary with speed, we can understand drag,
which is a force. Drag is simply power divided by speed. Figure 12 shows the
induced, parasitic, and total drag as a function of speed. Here the induced
drag varies as one over speed squared and parasitic drag varies as the speed
squared. Taking a look at these curves one can deduce a few things about how
airplanes are designed. Slower airplanes, such as gliders, are designed to
minimize induced drag (or induced power), which dominates at lower speeds. Faster
airplanes are more concerned with parasitic drag (or parasitic power).
Fig
12 Drag versus speed.
Wing efficiency
At cruise, a
non-negligible amount of the drag of a modern wing is induced drag. Parasitic
drag, which dominates at cruise, of a Boeing 747 wing is only equivalent to
that of a 1/2-inch cable of the same length. One might ask what affects the
efficiency of a wing. We saw that the induced power of a wing is proportional
to the vertical velocity of the air. If the length of a wing were to be
doubled, the size of our scoop would also double, diverting twice as much air.
So, for the same lift the vertical velocity (and thus the angle of attack)
would have to be halved. Since the induced power is proportional to the
vertical velocity of the air, it too is reduced by half. Thus, the lifting
efficiency of a wing is proportional to one over the length of the wing. The
longer the wing the less induced power required to produce the same lift,
though this is achieved with an increase in parasitic drag. Low speed airplanes
are affected more by induced drag than fast airplanes and so have longer wings.
That is why sailplanes, which fly at low speeds, have such long wings.
High-speed fighters, on the other hand, feel the effects of parasitic drag more
than our low speed trainers. Therefore, fast airplanes have shorter wings to
lower parasite drag.
There
is a misconception held by some that lift does not require power. This comes
from aeronautics in the study of the idealized theory of wing sections
(airfoils). When dealing with an airfoil, the picture is actually that of a
wing with infinite span. Since we have seen that the power necessary for lift
is proportional to one over the length of the wing, a wing of infinite span
does not require power for lift. If lift did not require power airplanes would
have the same range full as they do empty, and helicopters could hover at any
altitude and load. Best of all, propellers (which are rotating wings) would not
require power to produce thrust. Unfortunately, we live in the real world where
both lift and propulsion require power.
Power and wing loading
Let us now
consider the relationship between wing loading and power. Does it take more
power to fly more passengers and cargo? And, does loading affect stall speed?
At a constant speed, if the wing loading is increased the vertical velocity
must be increased to compensate. This is done by increasing the angle of
attack. If the total weight of the airplane were doubled (say, in a 2-g turn)
the vertical velocity of the air is doubled to compensate for the increased
wing loading. The induced power is proportional to the load times the vertical
velocity of the diverted air, which have both doubled. Thus the induced power
requirement has increased by a factor of four! The same thing would be true if
the airplane’s weight were doubled by adding more fuel, etc.
One
way to measure the total power is to look at the rate of fuel consumption.
Figure 13 shows the fuel consumption versus gross weight for a large transport
airplane traveling at a constant speed (obtained from actual data). Since the
speed is constant the change in fuel consumption is due to the change in
induced power. The data are fitted by a constant (parasitic power) and a term
that goes as the load squared. This second term is just what was predicted in
our Newtonian discussion of the effect of load on induced power.
Fig
13 Fuel consumption versus load for a large transport airplane traveling at a
constant speed.
The
increase in the angle of attack with increased load has a downside other than
just the need for more power. As shown in figure 9 a wing will eventually stall
when the air can no longer follow the upper surface, that is, when the critical
angle is reached. Figure 14 shows the angle of attack as a function of airspeed
for a fixed load and for a 2-g turn. The angle of attack at which the plane
stalls is constant and is not a function of wing loading. The stall speed
increases as the square root of the load. Thus, increasing the load in a 2-g
turn increases the speed at which the wing will stall by 40%. An increase in
altitude will further increase the angle of attack in a 2-g turn. This is why
pilots practice "accelerated stalls" which illustrate that an
airplane can stall at any speed. For any speed there is a load that will induce
a stall.
Fig
14 Angle of attack versus speed for straight and level flight and for a 2-g
turn.
Wing vortices
One might ask
what the downwash from a wing looks like. The downwash comes off the wing as a
sheet and is related to the details of the load distribution on the wing.
Figure 15 shows, through condensation, the distribution of lift on an airplane
during a high-g maneuver. From the figure one can see that the distribution of
load changes from the root of the wing to the tip. Thus, the amount of air in
the downwash must also change along the wing. The wing near the root is
"scooping" up much more air than the tip. Since the root is diverting
so much air the net effect is that the downwash sheet will begin to curl outward
around itself, just as the air bends around the top of the wing because of the
change in the velocity of the air. This is the wing vortex. The tightness of
the curling of the wing vortex is proportional to the rate of change in lift
along the wing. At the wing tip the lift must rapidly become zero causing the
tightest curl. This is the wing tip vortex and is just a small (though often
most visible) part of the wing vortex. Returning to figure 6 one can clearly
see the development of the wing vortices in the downwash as well as the wing
tip vortices.
Fig
15 Condensation showing the distribution of lift along a wing. The wingtip
vortices are also seen. (from Patterns in the Sky, J.F. Campbell and J.R.
Chambers, NASA SP-514.)
Winglets
(those small vertical extensions on the tips of some wings) are used to improve
the efficiency of the wing by increasing the effective length of the wing. The
lift of a normal wing must go to zero at the tip because the bottom and the top
communicate around the end. The winglets blocks this communication so the lift
can extend farther out on the wing. Since the efficiency of a wing increases
with length, this gives increased efficiency. One caveat is that winglet design
is tricky and winglets can actually be detrimental if not properly designed.
Ground effect
Another common
phenomenon that is misunderstood is that of ground effect. That is the
increased efficiency of a wing when flying within a wing length of the ground.
A low-wing airplane will experience a reduction in drag by 50% just before it
touches down. There is a great deal of confusion about ground effect. Many
pilots (and the FAA VFR Exam-O-Gram No. 47) mistakenly believe that ground
effect is the result of air being compressed between the wing and the ground.
To
understand ground effect it is necessary to have an understanding of upwash.
For the pressures involved in low speed flight, air is considered to be
non-compressible. When the air is accelerated over the top of the wing and
down, it must be replaced. So some air must shift around the wing (below and
forward, and then up) to compensate, similar to the flow of water around a
canoe paddle when rowing. This is the cause of upwash.
As
stated earlier, upwash is accelerating air in the wrong direction for lift.
Thus a greater amount of downwash is necessary to compensate for the upwash as
well as to provide the necessary lift. Thus more work is done and more power
required. Near the ground the upwash is reduced because the ground inhibits the
circulation of the air under the wing. So less downwash is necessary to provide
the lift. The angle of attack is reduced and so is the induced power, making
the wing more efficient.
Earlier,
we estimated that a Cessna 172 flying at 110 knots must divert about 2.5
ton/sec to provide lift. In our calculations we neglected the upwash. From the
magnitude of ground effect, it is clear that the amount of air diverted is
probably more like 5 ton/sec.
Conclusions
Let us review
what we have learned and get some idea of how the physical description has
given us a greater ability to understand flight. First what have we learned:
·
The
amount of air diverted by the wing is proportional to the speed of the wing and
the air density.
·
The
vertical velocity of the diverted air is proportional to the speed of the wing
and the angle of attack.
·
The
lift is proportional to the amount of air diverted times the vertical velocity
of the air.
·
The
power needed for lift is proportional to the lift times the vertical velocity
of the air.
Now let us
look at some situations from the physical point of view and from the
perspective of the popular explanation.
·
The
plane’s speed is reduced. The physical view says that the amount of air
diverted is reduced so the angle of attack is increased to compensate. The power
needed for lift is also increased. The popular explanation cannot address this.
·
The
load of the plane is increased. The physical view says that the amount of air
diverted is the same but the angle of attack must be increased to give
additional lift. The power needed for lift has also increased. Again, the
popular explanation cannot address this.
·
A
plane flies upside down. The physical view has no problem with this. The plane
adjusts the angle of attack of the inverted wing to give the desired lift. The popular explanation implies that
inverted flight is impossible.
As one can
see, the popular explanation, which fixates on the shape of the wing, may
satisfy many but it does not give one the tools to really understand flight.
The physical description of lift is easy to understand and much more powerful.
Axis
of Rotation
Axis of an
Airplane in Flight.
An airplane
may turn about three axes. Whenever the attitude of the airplane changes in
flight (with respect to the ground or other fixed object), it will rotate about
one or more of these axes. Think of these axes as imaginary axles around which
the airplane turns like a wheel. The three axes intersect at the center of
gravity and each one is perpendicular to the other two.
Longitudinal
Axis: The
imaginary line that extends lengthwise through the fuselage, from nose to tail,
is the longitudinal axis. Motion about the longitudinal axis is roll and is
produced by movement of the ailerons located at the trailing edges of the
wings.
Lateral
Axis: The
imaginary line which extends crosswise, wing tip to wing tip, is the lateral
axis. Motion about the lateral axis is pitch and is produced by movement of the
elevators at the rear of the horizontal tail assembly.
Vertical
Axis: The
imaginary line which passes vertically through the center of gravity is the vertical
axis. Motion about the vertical axis is yaw and is produced by movement of the
rudder located at the rear of the vertical tail assembly.
DETAILS
OF MODERN AIRSHIPS - 1927
Advantages
of Rigid Type Airships--Airship Frame Construction--Large Airships
Projected--Army Non-rigid Dirigibles--Requirements of Airships for Civilian
Flying.
Advantages
of Rigid Type Airship. Before describing typical lighter- than-air craft or airships
that have received actual commercial as well as military usage, it may be well
to briefly review some of the advantages of the rigid type, which is the one
that lends itself most easily to large structures and which is also the safest
of the three types we have previously reviewed in Chapter II which is devoted
to a consideration of the elementary principles underlying airship construction
and application. Rigid airships have made longer single flights than other
types and have flown more hours and miles without refueling than any other
form. The rigid airship is said to be the fastest large vehicle of
transportation that engineering ability of man has yet evolved. The Navy
Airship Los Angeles, shown near the mooring mast at Lakehurst, N. J. to which
it may be anchored is depicted at Fig. 315. A design of the new 6,500,000 cubic
foot capacity ship recently authorized by Congress is shown at Fig. 316 flying
over a battleship at an elevation of about 1,500 feet. The rigid airship, owing
to its large size and light weight can carry more load than any other type of
aircraft. It is independent of topography as oceans and continents are but
areas to fly over. Land vehicles must stop when they reach water, water
transport must stop when the ship is docked.
Airship
Frame Construction. The rigid airship, because of its bulkhead system, in which
the lifting gas is carried in 16 to 20 cells, has a much greater safety factor
than the types in which the gas is carried in only one or two containers. In
event of damage to one or two cells, the ship can continue its journey and
repairs can be made to a leaky gas cell while in flight.
The
rigid ship has a complete metal framework. Girders extend from nose to tail, or
in nautical parlance, from stem to stern. Ring girders set at intervals brace
the longitudinals and are themselves internally reinforced by cross girders and
tension wire bracing. The entire framework is enclosed by a network of wiring
and the whole is streamlined or faired to minimize air resistance with a fabric
covering.
The
view of the crew's quarters on the Bodensee, a German air liner at Fig. 317,
shows the triangular keel member with the cat-walk by which the crew can travel
from one end of the ship to the other and gain access to the different gas
bags. The character of the longitudinal duralumin girders and the way they are
braced by the ring girders is clearly shown at Fig. 318. This depicts that
portion of the hull where one set of fuel tanks are located. The view at Fig.
319 shows the interior with the deflated gas cells hanging from the top-most
longitudinal ready for inflation.
The
outer skin is in place and the large size and extreme lightness of the
structure is clearly shown. The passenger cabin of the Deutschland, another
rigid dirigible of the Zepellin series is shown at Fig. 320. Wicker chairs are
used because of their light weight and the interior structure of the cabin can
be determined by study of the illustration.
The
control of a Zepellin type airship is not as simple as that of an airplane and
no one man is at the controls. Special controls are provided for the elevators
and still another set for the vertical rudders. The elevator control of the L59
with the instruments for altitude navigation is shown at Fig. 321. Control is
by a large wheel similar to the steering wheel of a ship. Directional control
is by a similar wheel at another part of the control car.
Large
Airship Projected. The largest of the United States Navy airships, the
Shenandoah was 600 feet long with a capacity of 2,115,000 cubic feet. The
projected airship designed by the engineers of the Goodyear- Zepellin Company,
while it has over three times the capacity of the Shenandoah will be only 100
feet longer and will be of such size that it may be housed in the Lakehurst
hangar. The illustration at Fig. 322 shows how the new ships authorized by
congress will compare with the Shenandoah. The control car will be built into the
hull and streamlined. Engines of 4,800 horsepower, giving a speed of 90 miles
per hour with fuel for from 5,000 to 8,000 miles will drive the ship. The air
screws will be fitted in tilting mountings, which will turn in a 90 degree arc
to help force the ship upward or downward as desired and greatly aid in
controlling the huge vessel.
It
will embody the proved structural advantages of some 135 ships built in the
past.
(a)
Multiple gas cells which function like bulk-heading on a steamship, so that if
one or more cells fail the ship will still remain aloft: (b) The triple cover
system, one cover to hold the lifting gas, one consisting of the shape-forming
duralumin frame-work, and an outer cover to shed rain and snow, to reflect
rather than to absorb heat, and to present a fair surface; (c) invulnerability
against lightning; (d) accessibility to inspection and repair.
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