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Results of a preliminary investigation of inlet unstart on a high-speed civil transport airplane conceptThe aircraft design engineer of today is tasked with satisfying an increasing number of conflicting requirements. The fact that conflict in these requirements may be technically, economically, or politically motivated usually compounds the difficulty of determining the best solution to a design issue. In this regard, propulsion/airframe integration for supersonic airplanes must rank as one of the most challenging aspects of airplane design. For the cruise Mach numbers currently being considered for High-Speed Civil Transport (HSCT) airplanes, the inlet requirements of low drag, low bleed flow, and high pressure recovery appear to be best met with a mixed-compression design. Unfortunately, these desirable attributes come with a highly undesirable companion: the inlet unstart phenomenon. Concern over the effects of a mixed-compression inlet unstart on the vehicle dynamics of large, high-speed aircraft is not new; a comprehensive wind-tunnel study addressing the problem was published in 1962. Additional investigations of the problem were made throughout the United States SST program and the follow-on NASA program into the late 1970's. The current study sought to examine the magnitude of the problem in order to determine if an inlet unstart posed a potential hazard severe enough to preclude the use of mixed-compression inlets on proposed HSCT concepts.
Document ID
19940029002
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Domack, Christopher S.
(Lockheed Engineering and Sciences Co. Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
April 1, 1992
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Langley Research Center, First Annual High-Speed Research Workshop, Part 3
Subject Category
Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Accession Number
94N33508
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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