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Lift and Drag of a Swept-Wing Fighter Airplane at Transonic and Supersonic SpeedsA flight investigation was made of the lift and drag of a sweptwing fighter airplane in the basic configuration and in a slats-locked-closed configuration over a Mach number range from about 0.63 to about 1.44. At a nominal lift coefficient of 0.1 negligible drag-coefficient difference existed between the two configurations over a comparable Mach number and altitude range. For the basic configuration at zero lift the supersonic drag level was about three times as great as the subsonic drag level, which was about 0.01, whereas the drag-due-to-lift factor increased about 137 percent over the test Mach number range. At comparable Mach numbers the high-altitude data produced a larger lift-curve slope and showed a more pronounced variation of lift-curve slope in the transonic region than did the low-altitude data. For the high-altitude data the lift-curve slope at a Mach number of 1.44 was approximately 62 percent of the value at a Mach number of 0.9.
Document ID
19630004009
Acquisition Source
Armstrong Flight Research Center
Document Type
Other - NASA Memorandum (MEMO)
Authors
Nugent, Jack
(National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. High-Speed Flight Station Edwards, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 1, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1959
Subject Category
Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
NASA-MEMO-10-1-58H
AFRC-E-DAA-TN47945
Report Number: NASA-MEMO-10-1-58H
Report Number: AFRC-E-DAA-TN47945
Accession Number
63N13885
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
SWEPT WING
SUPERSONIC SPEED
LIFT
DRAG
TRANSONIC SPEED
FIGHTER AIRCRAFT
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