A theory of supercritical wing sections : with computer programs and examples
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A theory of supercritical wing sections : with computer programs and examples
(Lecture notes in economics and mathematical systems, 66)
Springer-Verlag, 1972
- : gw
- : us
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Note
Bibliography: p. 81-83
Description and Table of Contents
Description
At present, there is considerable interest in supercritical wing technology for the development of aircraft designed to fly near the speed of sound. The basic principle is the suppression of boundary layer separation by shifting the shock waves that occur on the wing toward the trailing edge and making them as weak as possible. The purpose of this report is to make available to the engineering public mathematical methods for the design of supercritical wings. These methods depend on the numerical solution of the partial differential equations of two-dimensional gas dynamics. The main contribution is a computer program for the design of shockless transonic airfoils using the hodograph transformation and analytic continuation into the complex domain. Another contribution is a program for the analysis of transonic flow with shocks past an airfoil at off-design conditions. In our design work we include a turbulent boundary layer correction. Part I of the paper is devoted to a description of the mathemati cal theory and need not be studied by those primarily concerned with running the programs. Part II is a manual for users of our programs which is independent of the theoretical part. In Part III and in Appendices II and III we give numerical examples and discuss computa tional results. The main substance of the report, however, is contained in the listing of the computer programs themselves in Appendix IV. We have used the Fortran language throughout and we have included numerous comment cards in the listing.
Table of Contents
I. Theory.- 1. Introduction.- 2. The Inverse Problem of Design.- 3. Complex Extension and the Schwarz Reflection Principle.- 4. Characteristic Coordinates.- 5. Initial Data.- 6. The Singular Solution.- 7. Finite Difference Scheme.- 8. The Sonic Locus.- 9. Branch Points and Limiting Lines.- 10. Automatic Selection of Parameters.- 11. Boundary Layer Correction.- 12. Analysis at Off-Design Conditions.- II. Users Manual.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Teletype Operation.- 3. Paths of Integration.- 4. Automation.- 5. Guidelines for Choosing the Input Parameters.- 6. The Boundary Layer Program.- 7. The Analysis Program.- III. Examples.- 1. Four Lifting Airfoils.- 2. Comparison with Analysis and Experiment.- 3. Conclusions.- References.- Figures.- Appendix I. Glossaries and Tables.- Appendix II. Sample Teletype Run.- Appendix III. Sample Output. Listing of (x,y)-Coordinates.- Appendix IV. Listing of Programs A-G.
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