NIFE Aerodynamics 2-1-1 Flashcards

1
Q

Define Vector

A

A quantity that represents a magnitude and a direction

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2
Q

Define air Density

A

Air Density is the total mass of air particles per unit volume

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3
Q

Define Moment

A

A rotational force around a point or axis

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4
Q

State the requirements for equilibrium flight

A

Equilibrium flight exists when the sum of all forces and the sum of all moments around the center of gravity are equal to zero.

Can be in Equilibrium in an ascent as long as there is no acceleration.

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5
Q

State the requirements for trimmed flight

A

Trimmed Flight exists when the sum of all moments around the center of gravity is equal to zero.

Can be in trimmed flight on turns.

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6
Q

Describe the relationship between temperature and altitude (average lapse rate)

A

Air temperature decreases linearly with an increase in altitude at a rate of 2 degrees C (3.57 F) per 1000 ft until 36,000 ft.

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7
Q

Describe relationship between humidity and air density

A

As humidity increases, air density decreases as water molecules, which are less dense than air molecules and do not change the number of particles per unit volume of air, displace an equal number of air molecules.

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8
Q

State the General Gas Law

A

Sets the relationship between the three properties of air: pressure (P), density (p), and temperature (T). R is a constant for any given gas.

P = pRT

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9
Q

Define steady airflow

A

Exists when static pressure, density, temp, and velocity remain constant at any time.

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10
Q

Explain the Continuity equation

A

A1V1=A2V2 (subsonic only)
The cross-sectional area of the tube multiplied by the air velocity at any point is equal to the value of any other point in the stream tube. (i.e. if the cross-sectional Area decreases on one side, the Velocity must increase on the same side so both sides remain equal)

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11
Q

Explain Bernoulli’s Equation

A

Total energy of a fluid can be separated into potential energy and kinetic energy. Describes variation of pressure exerted by a moving mass of fluid. Applies to frictionless, incompressible airflow in a closed system.

Pt = Ps + 1/2(density)(V^2)
Pt = Total Pressure
Ps = Static Pressure
V = velocity
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12
Q

State the different types of airspeeds

A
Indicated Airspeed (IAS) 
- Actual instrument indication of the dynamic pressure the plane is exposed to during flight. Calibrated for Knots Indicated Air Speed (KIAS)
Calibrated Airspeed (CAS)
- IAS corrected for instrument error
Equivalent Airspeed (EAS)
- CAS corrected for compressibility. The EAS is the true airspeed at sea level on a standard day that produces the same dynamic pressure as the actual flight condition. 
True Airspeed (TAS)
- The actually velocity at which an airplane moves through an air mass. Found by correcting EAS for the difference between the local air density (p) and the density of the air at sea level on a standard day (p0). At altitudes above sea level (lower density), TAS is higher than IAS. 

Ground Speed
- Plane’s actual speed over ground. GS = TAS + or - Wind

EX:
Sea level, normal desnity, 150 KIAS
At 10,000 feet, decrease in density = air particle are further apart, 150 KIAS is actually closer to 175 because of how the pitot static system works.
If there is a 10mph HW, then the GS would be 165. 10mph tailwind = 185.

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13
Q

Indicated Airspeed (IAS)

A

The actual instrument indication of the dynamic pressure the airplane is exposed to during flight. Factors may create variances between IAS and actual flight speed. Shown in knots of indicated airspeed (KIAS)

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14
Q

Calibrated airspeed (CAS)

A

Indicated airspeed that has been corrected for instrument error.

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15
Q

Equivalent Airspeed (EAS)

A

Calibrated airspeed that has been corrected for compressibility error.

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16
Q

True Airspeed (TAS)

A

Equivalent Air Speed corrected for density. The actual speed a plane moves through an air mass.

17
Q

Ground Speed

A

Airplane’s actual speed over ground. TAS corrected for wind

18
Q

Define Mean Camber Line (MCL)

A

The locus of points halfway between the upper and lower surfaces

19
Q

Define Chord

A

Chord is the precise measurement between the leading and trailing edges measured along the chord line

20
Q

Define Camber and Camber Types

A

The maximum distance between the mean camber line and the chordline, measured perpendicular to the chordline.

A positively cambered airfoil produces lift at zero AOA

Symmetric camber airfoil produces no lift at zero AOA

A negative cambered airfoil produces negative lift at AOA

21
Q

Define Wingspan (b)

A

The length of a wing, measured from wingtip to wingtip.

22
Q

Define Wing Area (S)

A

The apparent surface area of a wing from wingtip to wingtip. The area within the outline of a wing in the plane of its chord, including the area within the feuselage, hull, or nacelles

23
Q

Define Chordwise airflow

A

Airflow perpendicular to leading edge of an airfoil. Produces lift as it accelerates over the wing.

24
Q

Define Spanwise Airflow

A

Airflow parallel to the leading edge. Moves from root to tip and does not accelerate over the wing and therefore does not produce lift

25
Q

Define Pitch Attitude

A

Pitch attitude (θ) is the angle between an airplane’s longitudinal axis and the horizon.

26
Q

Define Flight Path

A

The path described by an airplane’s center of gravity as it moves through an air mass. Equal in magnitude and in the opposite direction of relative wind.

27
Q

Define Relative Wind

A

Relative wind is the airflow the airplane experiences as it moves through the air. It is equal in magnitude and opposite of flight path.

28
Q

Define Angle of Attack (AOA)

A

The angle between the chord line and the relative wind

29
Q

Define Angle of Incidence

A

The angle between the airplane’s longitudinal axis and the chordline of the wing.

e.g. how the wing is attached to the plane.

30
Q

DESCRIBE the airplane three-axis reference system

A

The longitudinal axis passes from the nose to the tail of the airplane. Lateral passes from wingtip to wingtip. Vertical passes through CoG

31
Q

Define center of gravity

A

The point at which all weight is considered to be concentrated and about which all forces and moments are measured. Can change as fuel is burned, ordnance is lost, cargo is shifted, etc.

32
Q

Define the Aerodynamic Center

A

The aerodynamic center is the point along the chordline around which all changes in the aerodynamic force take place. Approx 1/4 the length of the chord from the leading edge or at the thickest part

33
Q

State the two forces considered aerodynamic forces

A

Lift and drag

34
Q

Describe the pressure distribution around and airfoil

A

As air particles hit the leading edge of the airfoil they are forced to go around it. With a positive AOA, air particles that flow above the airfoil sense a bigger reduction in the cross sectional area compared to those that flow below. According to the continuity equation, as the area decreases, the velocity in the streamtube must increase. With Bernoulli’s eqn, as velocity increases, dynamic pressure will increase. With constant total pressure, static pressure will decrease. The difference in static pressure between the upper and lower surfaces will produce lift.

35
Q

Describe how factors in the lift equation affect lift production, given density, velocity, surface area, and coefficient of lift

A
L = (0.5)(p)(V^2)(S)(Cl)
p = density
V = Velocity
S = Wing Area
Cl = Coefficient of lift (can only control AOA and shape of airfoil)
36
Q

LIST the factors affecting coefficient of lift that the pilot can directly control

A

AOA and shape/camber of airfoil through flaps

37
Q

Define CLmax

A

The maximum value for the coefficient of lift as AOA increases.

38
Q

Describe the relationship between coefficient of lift and AOA

A

As AOA increases, the coefficient of lift increases up to a maximum value (Clmax). The AOA at which CLmax is reached is called CLmax AOA.

39
Q

Describe how flaps affect the coefficient of lift and Clmax

A

Flaps change the camber of the airfoil by changing the chordline, adding more positive camber to the airfoil.

CL is higher for a given AOA but the stalling AOA (CLmax AOA) decreases.