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A New Compendium of Unsteady Aerodynamic Test Cases for CFD: Summary of AVT WG-003 ActivitiesWith the continuous progress in hardware and numerical schemes, Computational Unsteady Aerodynamics (CUA), that is, the application of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) to unsteady flowfields, is slowly finding its way as a useful and reliable tool (turbulence and transition modeling permitting) in the aircraft, helicopter, engine and missile design and development process. Before a specific code may be used with confidence it is essential to validate its capability to describe the physics of the flow correctly, or at least to the level of approximation required, for which purpose a comparison with accurate experimental data is needed. Unsteady wind tunnel testing is difficult and expensive; two factors which dramatically limit the number of organizations with the capability and/or resources to perform it. Thus, unsteady experimental data is scarce, often classified and scattered in diverse documents. Additionally, access to the reports does not necessarily assure access to the data itself. The collaborative effort described in this paper was conceived with the aim of collecting into a single easily accessible document as much quality data as possible. The idea is not new. In the early 80's NATO's AGARD (Advisory Group for Aerospace Research & Development) Structures and Material Panel (SMP) produced AGARD Report No. 702 "Compendium of Unsteady Aerodynamic Measurements", which has found and continues to find extensive use within the CUA Community. In 1995 AGARD's Fluid Dynamics Panel (FDP) decided to update and expand the former database with new geometries and physical phenomena, and launched Working Group WG-22 on "Validation Data for Computational Unsteady Aerodynamic Codes". Shortly afterwards AGARD was reorganized as the RTO (Research and Technology Organization) and the WG was renamed as AVT (Applied Vehicle Technolology) WG-003. Contributions were received from AEDC, BAe, DLR, DERA, Glasgow University, IAR, NAL, NASA, NLR, and ONERA. The final publication with the results of the exercise is expected in the second part of 1999. The aim of the present paper is to announce and present the new database to the Aeroelasticity community. It is also intended to identify, together with one of the groups of end users it targets, deficiencies in the compendium that should be addressed by means of new wind tunnel tests or by obtaining access to additionally existing data.
Document ID
19990050912
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Ruiz-Calavera, Luis P.
(Instituto Nacional de Tecnica Aeroespacial Torrejon de Ardoz, Spain)
Bennett, Robert
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA United States)
Fox, John H.
(Sverdrup Technology, Inc. Arnold AFS, TN United States)
Galbraith, Robert W.
(Glasgow Univ. United Kingdom)
Geurts, Evert
(National Aerospace Lab. Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Henshaw, Micahel J. deC.
(British Aerospace Aircraft Group Bristol, United Kingdom)
Huang, XingZhong
(Institute for Aerospace Research Ottawa, Ontario Canada)
Kaynes, Ian W.
(Defence Evaluation Research Agency Farnborough, United Kingdom)
Loeser, Thomas
(Deutsche Forschungsanstalt fuer Luft- und Raumfahrt Brunswick, Germany)
Naudin, Pierre
(Office National d'Etudes et de Recherches Aerospatiales Paris, France)
Tamayama, Masato
(National Aerospace Lab. Tokyo, Japan)
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1999
Publication Information
Publication: CEAS/AIAA/ICASE/NASA Langley International Forum on Aeroelasticity and Structural Dynamics 1999
Issue: Pt. 1
Subject Category
Aerodynamics
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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