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Proceedings of the 2004 NASA/ONR Circulation Control Workshop, Part 2This conference proceeding is comprised of papers that were presented at the NASA/ONR Circulation Control Workshop held 16-17 March 2004 at the Radisson-Hampton in Hampton, VA. Over two full days, 30 papers and 4 posters were presented with 110 scientists and engineers in attendance, representing 3 countries. As technological advances influence the efficiency and effectiveness of aerodynamic and hydrodynamic applications, designs, and operations, this workshop was intended to address the technologies, systems, challenges and successes specific to Coanda driven circulation control in aerodynamics and hydrodynamics. A major goal of this workshop was to determine the state-of-the-art in circulation control and to assess the future directions and applications for circulation control. The 2004 workshop addressed applications, experiments, computations, and theories related to circulation control, emphasizing fundamental physics, systems analysis, and applied research. The workshop consisted of single session oral presentations, posters, and written papers that are documented in this unclassified conference proceeding. The format of this written proceeding follows the agenda of the workshop. Each paper is followed with the presentation given at the workshop. the editors compiled brief summaries for each effort that is at the end of this proceeding. These summaries include the paper, oral presentation, and questions or comments that occurred during the workshop. The 2004 Circulation Control Workshop focused on applications including Naval vehicles (Surface and Underwater vehicles), Fixed Wing Aviation (general aviation, commercial, cargo, and business aircraft); V/STOL platforms (helicopters, military aircraft, tilt rotors); propulsion systems (propellers, jet engines, gas turbines), and ground vehicles (automotive, trucks, and other); wind turbines, and other nontraditional applications (e.g., vacuum cleaner, ceiling fan). As part of the CFD focus area of the 2004 CC Workshop, CFD practitioners were invited to compute a two-dimensional benchmark problem for which geometry, flow conditions, grids, and experimental data were available before the workshop. The purpose was to accumulate a database of simulations for a single problem using a range of CFD codes, turbulence models, and grid strategies so as to expand knowledge of model performance/requirements and guide simulation of practical CC configurations.
Document ID
20050196628
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Jones, Gregory S.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Joslin, Ronald D.
(Office of Naval Research Arlington, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 2005
Subject Category
Aircraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
NASA/CP-2005-213509/PT2
L-18395B/PT2
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2004 NASA/ONR Circulation Control Workshop
Location: Hampton, VA
Country: United States
Start Date: March 16, 2004
End Date: March 17, 2004
Sponsors: Office of Naval Research, NASA Headquarters
Funding Number(s)
WORK_UNIT: WU 23-762-55-ME
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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