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Why Airplanes Fly. Aerodynamics. Institute of Computational Fluid Dynamics. Aerodynamics?. Aero – means Air Dynamics – means Motion Aerodynamics – the study of air in motion Important Point: Air is “ Viscous ” Uh, that means it’s Sticky. Forces and Vectors.
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Why Airplanes Fly Aerodynamics Institute of Computational Fluid Dynamics
Aerodynamics? • Aero – means Air • Dynamics – means Motion • Aerodynamics – the study of air in motion • Important Point: Air is “Viscous” Uh, that means it’s Sticky
Forces and Vectors • A force may be thought of as a push or pull in a specific direction. • A force is a vector quantity so a force has both a magnitude and a direction. • When describing forces, we have to specify both the magnitude and the direction.
Airplane Parts Empennage(Tail) Vertical Stabilizer Wing Horizontal Stabilizer Engine Fuselage (Body)
Center of Gravity (CG) Weight
Drag Newton’s 1st Law Applies
Thrust Newton’s 3rd Law Applies
Lift Thrust Drag Weight Lift Newton’s 3rd Law Applies
Think About ItIt’s “Tug-a-War” The motion of the airplane through the air depends on the relative strength and direction of the forces we’ve discussed. If the 4 forces are balanced, the aircraft cruises at constant velocity and altitude. If the forces are unbalanced, the aircraft accelerates in the direction of the largest force.
Streak Lines 10° AOA AOA: Angle Of Attack - the angle that the wing meets the oncoming air. Note: Downwash Air Accelerated Down Newton’s 2nd and 3rd Laws Apply
Circulation Pattern“Bound Vortex” Airflow Around a Wing AOA Notice that: • Air on top arrives well before air below. “accelerated” (stretched in the diagram) • Air below decelerated (arrives after “free stream”)(compressed in the diagram) 0° 3° 8°
Pressure Field Result of the accelerated flow on top and decelerated flow on bottom.
Forces on the Airfoil Forces act along the entire surface.
Which way does the liftingforce actually work? Net Force Combining all the forces.
Lift Relates to AOA Zero Lift at Zero AOA
2D Airflow Over an Airfoil Institute of Computational Fluid Dynamics
AOA: 0° AOA: 8° AOA: 20° Airflow at Selected AOA Institute of Computational Fluid Dynamics
Wrapping Up Forces & Lift • Lift = Pressure * Wing Area • Pressure is dependant on: • Airfoil Shape • Wing Velocity through the air • Angle that wing meets air (AOA) • Air density (more dense = more pressure) • Newton’s 3rd Law? “For every Action there is and Equal and Opposite Reaction” The more air moved down by the wing (Action)the more lift is generated (Reaction) “Equal and Opposite”
Flight Without Thrust? • Lift is dependant on Velocity • Velocity is generated by Thrust • Lift is dependant on Thrust • No Thrust = No Lift If Thrust is so critical to generate Velocity Then … How do GLIDERS FLY
Rising Air 500’ per minute Gliders Glider Climbing 400’ per minute Glider Descending 100’ per minute Due to Gravity Air Rising: 500’ per minute Glider Descending: 100’ per minute -------------------------------------------------- Glider Climbing: 400’ per minute
Stability and Control • Add cool graphics
Aircraft Motion Aircraft move in 3D (dimensions) (Cars move in just 1D) • Pitch (up and down) • Yaw (left and right) • Roll (well uh, roll) • ALL motion occurs around the balance point, called the Center of Gravity (CG)
Glider Demonstration • Fly gliders • Observe difference in flight • Find physical differences in planes • Explore why they work
The Gliders What are the differences?
Dihedral Balanced Forces Unbalanced Forces Plane slips towards low wing, increasing lift on that wing.
Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Down Down Down CG CG CG CG CG CG Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Lift Unstable Down Down Down Down Down CG CG CG CG CG CG Location Stable Unstable
Stable vs. Unstable • Stability is not always desirable. • Why? • Where would you want: • Stable airplanes? • Unstable airplanes?
Control • A simple matter of affecting the forces that we have just discussed! • Control results from manipulating various control surfaces on the plane to change the forces.
Rudder (Yaw) Elevators (Pitch) Spoilers (Decrease Lift Increase and Drag) Ailerons (Roll) Slats (Increase Lift) Flaps (Increase Lift and Drag) Control Surfaces
Aerodynamic Myths • Biplanes have 2 wings to get twice the lift. • “Air Pockets” cause airplanes to drop suddenly while flying. • Lift is generated by the wing’s top, curved, surface which causes low pressure. • Bumblebees can’t fly.
References • “The Beginner’s Guide to Aeronautics”, NASA http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/ • “IRROTATIONAL PLANE FLOWS OF AN INVISCID FLUID”; Colombini, Marco; UNIVERSITY OF GENOA http://www.diam.unige.it/~irro/ • Institute of Computational Fluid Dynamicshttp://www.icfd.co.jp/index-e.htm • See How It Flies; Denker, John S.http://www.av8n.com/how/#mytoc • “Bumblebees finally cleared for takeoff”; Wang, Z. Jane; Cornellhttp://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/March00/APS_Wang.hrs.html • DNS of Separated Flow around NACA0012 Airfoil; Shih, et al. (1992, 1995); University of Texashttp://www.uta.edu/faculty/hshan/research/gallery.shtml
Items to Bring • Gliders • Glue • Demo plane • Propellers
Vortex Generation DNS of Separated Flow around NACA0012 Airfoil
CG Location Lift Down Stable CG Lift Unstable Down CG