Monday, January 1, 2018

Designing new aerodynamic vehicles typically requires a...

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Designing new aerodynamic vehicles typically requires a combination of multiple experimental and numerical techniques. The photo above shows a model for an unmanned flying wing-type vehicle. Here it’s tested in a water tunnel with dye introduced to the flow to highlight different areas. The model is at a high angle of attack (18 degrees) relative to the oncoming flow. This puts it in danger of flow separation and stall, the point where a wing experiences a drastic loss in lift. The smooth flow over the front of the model indicates it hasn’t reached this point yet, but notice how both the green and red dyes are separating from the model and becoming very turbulent over the back of the wing. If the model were pushed to an even higher angle of attack, that separation point would move further forward, bringing stall that much closer. (Image credit: L. Erm and J. Drobik; research credit: R. Cummings and A. Schütte)

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