Spectroscopic Measurement Techniques for Aerospace FlowsThe conditions that characterize aerospace flows are so varied, that a single diagnostic technique is not sufficient for its measurement. Fluid dynamists use knowledge of similarity to help categorize and focus on different flow conditions. For example, the Reynolds number represents the ratio of inertial to viscous forces in a flow. When the velocity scales, length scales, and gas density are large and the magnitude of the molecular viscosity is low, the Reynolds number becomes large. This corresponds to large scale vehicles (e.g Airbus A380), fast moving objects (e.g. artillery projectiles), vehicles in dense fluids (e.g. submarine in water), or flows with low dynamic viscosity (e.g. skydiver in air). In each of these cases, the inertial forces dominate viscous forces, and unsteady turbulent fluctuations in the flow variables are observed. In contrast, flows with small length scales (e.g. dispersion of micro-particles in a solid rocket nozzle), slow moving objects (e.g. micro aerial vehicles), flows with low density gases (e.g. atmospheric re-entry), or fluids with a large magnitude of viscosity (e.g. engine coolant flow), all have low Reynolds numbers. In these cases, viscous forces become very important and often the flows can be steady and laminar. The Mach number, which is the ratio of the velocity to the speed of sound in the medium, also helps to differentiate types of flows. At very low Mach numbers, acoustic waves travel much faster than the object, and the flow can be assumed to be incompressible (e.g. Cessna 172 aircraft). As the object speed approaches the speed of sound, the gas density can become variable (e.g. flow over wing of Learjet 85). When the object speed is higher than the speed of sound (Ma > 1), the presences of shock waves and other gas dynamic features can become important to the vehicle performance (e.g. SR-71 Blackbird). In the hypersonic flow regime (Ma > 5), large changes in temperature begin to affect flow properties, causing real-gas effects to occur (e.g. X-43 Scramjet). At even higher Mach numbers, chemistry and nonequilibrium effects come into play (e.g. Startdust re-entry capsule), further complicating the measurement. These limits can be predicted by calculating the ratio of chemical and thermal relaxation time to the flow time scales. Other non-dimensional numbers can be used to further differentiate types of aerospace flows.
Document ID
20140006405
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Danehy, Paul M. (NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Bathel, Brett F. (NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Johansen, Craig T. (Calgary Univ. Alberta, Canada)
Cutler, Andrew D. (George Washington Univ. Newport News, VA, United States)
Hurley, Samantha (George Washington Univ. Newport News, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
May 28, 2014
Publication Date
May 9, 2014
Subject Category
Instrumentation And Photography
Report/Patent Number
NF1676L-18752Report Number: NF1676L-18752
Meeting Information
Meeting: Von Karman Institute (VKI) Lecture Series on "Spectroscopy and Spectroscopic Measurement Techniques for Aerospace Flows"