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Aerodynamics

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Aerodynamics
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Basic Aerodynamics









Basic Aerodynamics





Dartmouth Flying Club

October 10, 2002

Andreas Bentz

Basic Aerodynamics









Lift





Bernoulli’s Principle

Energy



 Definition: Energy is the ability to do work.

 Energy cannot be created or destroyed. We

can only change its form.

 A fluid in motion has (mainly) two forms of

energy:

 kinetic energy (velocity),

 potential energy (pressure).









3

The Venturi Tube and Bernoulli’s Principle









kinetic energy velocity

(velocity) increases

potential energy pressure

(pressure) decreases









4

Lift: Wing Section

 Air flows toward the low pressure area above the wing:

upwash and downwash.

 Newton’s third law of motion: to every action there is

an equal and opposite reaction.

 “The reaction to downwash is, in fact, that misunderstood

force called lift.” Schiff p. 8



relative low pressure









upwash downwash

5

Angle of Attack

 The angle of attack is the angle between the chord line

and the average relative wind.

 Greater angle of attack creates more lift (up to a

point).



total

lift









6

Lift and Induced Drag

 Lift acts through the center of pressure, and

perpendicular to the relative wind.

 This creates induced drag.

induced drag



effective total

lift lift









7

Got Lift? Flaps



 Flaps increase

the wing’s

camber.

 Some also

increase the

wing area

(fowler flap).

 Almost all jet

transports also

have leading

edge flaps.

8

Too Much Lift? Spoilers



 Spoilers destroy lift:

 to slow down in flight (flight spoilers);

 for roll control in flight (flight spoilers);



 to slow down on the ground (ground spoilers).









9

Basic Aerodynamics









Side Effects





There is no such things as a free lunch.

Drag: Total Drag (Power Required) Curve



1,400



1,200

max.

1,000 lift/drag

best glide

800



600

 induced drag

400

 parasite drag

Drag (lbs)









 resistance 200



 total drag

50 100 150 200

Indicated Airspeed (knots)

11

Wingtip Vortices and Wake Turbulence





relative low pressure









 Wingtip vortices create drag:

 “ground effect”;

 tip tanks, drooped wings, “winglets”.





12

Basic Aerodynamics









Stability





Longitudinal: Static, Dynamic

Lateral

Longitudinal Stability









lift

down lift









weight

 Static stability (tendency to return after control input)

 up elevator increases downward lift, angle of attack increases;

 lift increases, drag increases, aircraft slows;

 less downward lift, angle of attack decreases (nose drops).

14

Aside: CG and Center of Pressure Location









lift

down lift









weight

 Aft CG increases speed:

 the tail creates less lift (less drag);

 the tail creates less down force (wings need to create less lift).

 This also decreases stall speed (lower angle of attack req’d).

15

Lateral Stability



 If one wing is lowered (e.g. by turbulence), the

airplane sideslips.

 The lower wing has a greater angle of attack (more

lift).

 This raises the lower wing.









16

Directional Stability



 As the airplane turns to the left (e.g. in

turbulence), the vertical stabilizer creates lift

toward the left.

 The airplane turns to the right.









17

Speed Stability v. Reverse Command

 Power curve: 1,400









Percent horsepower

100%

 Power is work

1,200 max.

performed by the

endurance

engine. (Thrust is 1,000

force created by the ca. 75% of

max.

propeller.) 800 lift/drag

50%

 Suppose airspeed

Drag (thrust required)

600

decreases.

 “Front Side”: Power is 400



greater than required:

200

aircraft accelerates.

 “Back Side”: Power is

less than required: 50 100 150 200



aircraft decelerates. Indicated Airspeed (knots)

18

Basic Aerodynamics









Turning Flight





Differential Lift

Turning Flight

 More lift on one wing than

on the other results in roll

around the longitudinal

axis (bank).

 Lowering the aileron on one

wing results in greater lift

and raises that wing.









20

Turning Flight, cont’d

 More lift on one wing than

on the other results in roll

around the longitudinal

axis (bank).

 Lowering the aileron on one

wing results in greater lift

and raises that wing.

Centrifugal

 This tilts lift sideways. Force

 The horizontal component

of lift makes the airplane

turn.

 (To maintain altitude, more

total lift needs to be created:

higher angle of attack req’d)

21

Adverse Yaw and Frise Aileron



 However, more lift on one

wing creates more

induced drag on that

wing: adverse yaw.

 Adverse yaw is corrected

by rudder application.

 Frise ailerons counter

adverse yaw:

 They create parasite drag

on the up aileron.

22

Basic Aerodynamics









Stalls





Too Much of a Good Thing

Stalls









 A wing section stalls when its critical angle of

attack is exceeded.

 Indicated stall speed depends on how much lift the

wing needs to create (weight, G loading).

24

Stalls, cont’d

 The disturbed airflow over the wing hits the tail and the

horizontal stabilizer. This is the “buffet”.

 Eventually, there will not be enough airflow over the

horizontal stabilizer, and it loses its downward lift. The

nose drops: the stall “breaks”.









lift

weight





25

Stalls, cont’d

 The whole wing

never stalls at the

same time.

 Power-on stalls in

most light singles

allow the wing to

stall more fully.

Why?

 Where do you

want the wing to

stall last?

 Ailerons



26

Stalls, cont’d (Stalls with one Engine Inop.)



 Stalls in a

twin with

one engine

inoperative

lead to roll

or spin

entry:

 Propeller

slipstream

delays

stall.

27

Stalls, cont’d



 Stall strips make the wing stall sooner.









28

Stalls, cont’d

 Definition: The angle of incidence is the acute angle

between the longitudinal axis of the airplane and the

chord line of the wing.

 Twist in the wing makes the wing root stall first:

 The angle of incidence decreases away from the wing root.









29

Preventing Stalls









 Slats direct airflow over the wing to avoid

boundary layer separation.

 Slots are similar but fixed, near the wingtips.

 Delays stall near the wingtip (aileron effectiveness).

30

Stalls and Turns



 Greater angles of bank require greater lift so

that:

 the vertical component of lift equals weight (to

maintain altitude),

 the horizontal component of lift equals centrifugal

force (constant radius, coordinated, turn)









31

Stalls and Turns, cont’d

 Load factor

limit load

(multiple of factor:

aircraft gross

weight the

wings acrobatic 6G

support)

increases

Normal 3.8G

with bank

angle.

 Stall speed

increases

accordingly.

32

Turns



 As bank increases, load factor increases.

 But: as airspeed increases, rate of turn

decreases.

 In order to make a 3 degree per second turn, at 500

Kts the airplane would have to bank more than 50

degrees.

 Uncomfortable (unsafe?) load factor.



 This is why for jet-powered airplanes, a

standard rate turn is 1.5 degrees per second.



33

Basic Aerodynamics









High and Fast





In the Flight Levels

High and Fast



 Mach is the ratio of the true airspeed to the

speed of sound.

 Speed of sound decreases with temperature.

 Temperature decreases with altitude.



 At higher altitudes, the same indicated airspeed

leads to higher Mach numbers.

 Conversely: at higher altitudes, a certain Mach

number can be achieved at a lower indicated

airspeed.

 The indicated stall speed increases with

altitude (compressibility).

35

High and Fast, cont’d

 At high subsonic speeds, portions of the wing can

induce supersonic airflow (critical Mach number Mcrit).

 Where the airflow slows to subsonic speeds, a

shockwave forms.

 The shockwave causes boundary layer separation.

 High-speed buffet, “aileron snatch”, “Mach tuck”.

velocity velocity decreases,

increases shockwave forms

boundary layer

separates







36

High and Fast, cont’d



 Vortex generators delay boundary layer

separation.









37

High and Fast, cont’d

 With

altitude:

 indicated

stall speed

(low speed

buffet)

increases;

 indicated

airspeed

that results

in critical

Mcrit

decreases.

 coffin corner

38

References



 De Remer D (1992) Aircraft Systems for Pilots

Casper: IAP

 FAA (1997) Pilot’s Handbook of Aeronautical

Knowledge AC61-23C Newcastle: ASA

 Lowery J (2001) Professional Pilot Ames: Iowa

State Univ. Press

 Schiff B (1985) The Proficient Pilot vol. 1 New

York: Macmillan

 U.S. Navy (1965) Aerodynamics for Naval

Aviators Newcastle: ASA

39


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