Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A...

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Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces

Transcript of Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A...

Page 1: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Marc Masquelier

How Airplanes FlyForces

Page 2: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Your Ideas…• What is an airplane?

• What are wings?

A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust exerted by the air passing over its wings

Airfoils attached transversely to the fuselage of an aircraft that provide lift

For many forces on an airplane, wing area (S) is a major reference number

Page 3: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Some Terminology

• Knots 1 kt = 1.15 mph• Angle of Attack AOA, or alpha, or α– The angle of the wind relative to the wing

AOA

Page 4: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Forces

• Lift• Weight• Thrust• Drag

Weight

DragThrust

Lift

Page 5: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Before We Start on Forces

We need to understand Pressure

Page 6: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Pressure

• Two types of pressure– Static (surrounding air)– Dynamic (speed)

• Total pressure = static + dynamic pressure

Page 7: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Pressure

• Total Pressure = Static Pressure (p) + Dynamic Pressure (1/2*ρ*V2) = constant for a given flight condition

Flow accelerates over the top – static pressure decreases

Flow remains constant – static pressure stays constant

Page 8: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Forces

• Lift• Weight• Thrust• Drag

Weight

DragThrust

Lift

Page 9: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift

• Mostly created by the wings• Lift = CL * q * S– Where q = dynamic pressure = 1/2*ρ*V2

Page 10: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift

Pressure distribution on upper surfaceNet Lift

Flow accelerates here

Page 11: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift

Higher AOA higher lift … until the wing stalls

Page 12: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

LiftStall

AOA is controlled by the pilot!

Page 13: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift – Airfoil

• Angle of Attack “AOA” or “α”– Relative wind– The angle where the wing meets the air

• Lift Coefficient– Lift = CL * q * S, or if you turn it around:

– CL = Lift / (q * S)– Is a function of angle of attack (as shown on last

chart)

Page 14: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift – Wing

• Aspect Ratio• Tradeoffs

Page 15: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Net Lift

So now we have:• Lift = CL * q * S, where

• CL = function of wing design, AOA• q = dynamic pressure = 1/2*ρ*V2

• S = wing area• And recall that AOA is controlled by the pilot• So you get more lift by flying faster, or

increasing AOA (until you stall)

Page 16: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Forces

• Lift• Weight• Thrust• Drag

Weight

DragThrust

Lift

Page 17: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Weight

• What contributes to weight?• Can it change?

Page 18: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Weight• Counteracts lift (generally)• 1 lb extra on an airplane requires 8 lb extra other “stuff” to

support it (stronger structure, bigger wing, extra electrical power, more cooling, more powerful engine, more gas…)

• Additional weight means – aircraft stalls at a higher speed higher approach/landing speed longer runway/bigger brakes/harder on gear

– higher AOA required to maneuver less stall margin less maneuverable

– higher AOA at a given speed more drag more thrust required more fuel consumption

• Aircraft designer’s #1 enemy

Page 19: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Forces

• Lift• Weight• Thrust• Drag

Weight

DragThrust

Lift

Page 20: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Thrust

• Generally provided by jet or prop• Pushes the airplane forward• Generally directed along aircraft waterline• A function of throttle position and airspeed– Props – max thrust when stationary – good for

low-speed applications– Jets – max thrust when moving – better for high-

speed applications

Page 21: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Propellers

• “Rotating wings”• Push the air backwards– Reaction is …

• Usually powered by a gasoline engine similar to a car engine, or a gas turbine

Page 22: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Jet Engines

• Smash the air down (compressor)• Toss in some fuel • Ignite (combustor)• Make the burning air do some work (turbine)• Expand and accelerate the hot gases out the

back (nozzle)

Page 23: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Forces

• Lift• Weight• Thrust• Drag

Weight

DragThrust

Lift

Page 24: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Drag

• What is drag?• What contributes?

Page 25: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

This May Have Some Extra Drag…

Page 26: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

This One Also

Page 27: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Drag

• LOTS of sources of drag– Drag due to lift (induced drag, typically the biggest

drag source)– Flight controls– Fuselage– External stores– Sensor packages

Page 28: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Induced Drag

Lift

Induced Drag

Net Force

Page 29: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Induced Drag

Low angle of attackLow induced drag

What can you say about these two flight conditions?

Airflow

High angle of attackHigh induced drag

Airflow

Page 30: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Net Drag

• Drag = CD * q * S

• CD is a composite of all drag sources– Can be a function of AOA– “drag counts” – 1 drag count = 0.0001 CD

• q = dynamic pressure = 1/2*ρ*V2

• And remember S = aircraft wing area (ft2)

Page 31: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Another Note about Drag

• Putting something external on an airplane is just like selling a house…– How you condition the airflow is a

Big Deal• Flat plates are ugly – unless parallel to

the airstream• Fairings are important

Page 32: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

A Quick Side Story

Vent

ral F

ins

LANTIRN Pods

Page 33: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift versus Drag

• Function of aircraft configuration

Cl –

Lift

Coe

ffici

ent

Cd – Drag Coefficient

Zero lift line

Best L/D

“approaching stall”Best L

/D

Add a bunch of dragL/D reduces slower max range speed More thrust required

Page 34: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Summary• Weight and drag are overcome by lift and thrust• Weight increases wreak havoc on aircraft

performance• Adding stuff on the outside of the airplane

must be carefully done to minimize drag and turbulence

• Aircraft design is always a compromise between vehicle performance and onboard systems (weapons/ sensors/ avionics/ fuel/ cargo) – Best if requirements are known from the start

Page 35: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Stall

• White Board

Page 36: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Lift

Coe

ffici

ent -

CL

Angle of Attack - α

Flaps and Slats

Lift

Coe

ffici

ent -

CL

Angle of Attack - α

Lift

Coe

ffici

ent -

CL

Angle of Attack - α

Flap

Slat

Page 37: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Flap

Page 38: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Wing Fence

Page 39: Marc Masquelier How Airplanes Fly Forces. Your Ideas… What is an airplane? What are wings? A heavier-than-air aircraft kept aloft by the upward thrust.

Recommended Reading

• Stick and Rudder by Wolfgang Langewiesche