NIFE Aerodynamics 2-2-1 Flashcards

1
Q

Total drag eqn (Not EO)

A

Dt = Dp + Di

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2
Q

Define Parasite drag and its components

A

Drag that does not aid flight. Has two basic elements: Form drag and Friction drag. Dp = qf

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3
Q

Form drag

A

Disruption of the streamline flow and the resistance of skin friction.

Caused by laminar airflow separation from a surface creating a low pressure wake behind an object.

The pressure differential between the front and rear creates suction that retards forward motion.

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4
Q

Friction drag

A

Rough surfaces increase the thickness of the boundary layer and create greater skin friction.

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5
Q

Describe induced drag

A

Created as a result of the wing developing lift. Whenever the wing is producing lift, wingtip vortices are produced.

The lower the airspeed, the greater AOA required to produce lift equal to the airplane’s weight and consequentially, the greater the induced drag.

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6
Q

Describe factors affecting induced drag, given the induced drag equation, and changes in lift, weight, density, velocity, and wingspan

A

Di = kW2/pV2b2

+ Lift increases > induced drag increases
+ Weight increase > Induced drag increases
+ Density increase > Induced drag decreases
+ Velocity increase > Induced drag decreases
+ Wingspan increase > Induced drag decreases

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7
Q

List prevention methods of Induced drag

A
  1. Wingtip Devices: Helps inhibit airflow around the wingtip

2. Ground effect: Reduces full rotation cycles of wingtip vortices

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8
Q

Define total drag

A

Sum of induced drag and parasite drag

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9
Q

Describe the effects of changes in velocity on total drag

A

Parasite drag increases as the square of airspeed, and induced drag varies inversely as the square of the airspeed. As speed decreases to near stall speed, the total drag increases due to the sharp rise in induced drag. As speed reaches terminal velocity, the total drag increases due to parasite drag.

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10
Q

Explain the importance of L/D max

A
  • Used to determine the efficiency of an airfoil
  • High L/D indicates a more efficient airfoil.
  • L/Dmax AOA is at the bottom of the total drag curve
  • L/Dmax AOA is the most efficient AOA AKA MAX RANGE
  • Any movement away from L/Dmax will increase drag
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11
Q

Define the boundary layer

A

The layer of airflow over a surface that demonstrates local airflow retardation due to viscosity. Usually 1mm thick at the leading edge of an airfoil and grows as it moves aft.

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12
Q

List the different types of flow within the boundary layer

A
  • Laminar flow

- Turbulent flow

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13
Q

Describe laminar flow

A

Air that moves smoothly along in streamlines. Laminar boundary layers produce little friction but can easily separate from the surface.

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14
Q

Describe turbulent flow

A

Streamlines break up and the flow is disorganized and irregular. A turbulent boundary layer produces more friction drag than a laminar boundary layer but is harder to separate from the surface

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15
Q

Describe boundary layer separation in regards to adverse pressure gradient

A

The boundary layer requires high kinetic pressure to adhere to a surface. As the static pressure increases as air flow aft from the point of max thickness, kinetic pressure decreases. If the boundary layer does not have sufficient energy to overcome the adverse pressure gradient then it will stagnate and separate.

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16
Q

Define stall

A

A condition of flight in which an increase in AOA results in a decrease in CL. Any AOA that exceeds CLmax AOA. The only cause of a stall is excessive AOA.

17
Q

Explain the difference between true and indicated stall speed

A

Indicated stall speed does not change as altitude changes. Due to lower air density at altitude, an airplane will have to fly at higher velocities to create sufficient dynamic pressure to produce the required lift (TAS)

18
Q

Explain the effects of gross weight, altitude, and flaps given the stall speed equation

A

+ Weight increase > Vs increase
+ Altitude increase > density decrease > Vs increase
+ Camber increase > Clmax increases > Vs decreases

19
Q

Explain the difference between speeds with respect to power on and power off stalls

A

Power-off stall assumes that the engine is at idle. Power-on stall speed will be less than power-off stall speed because at high pitch attitudes, part of the weight of the plane is being supported by the vertical portion of thrust.

20
Q

Describe the factors that cause a spin

A

The aircraft must be stalled and yaw must be present. This causes asymmetrically stalled wings which will then propagate roll and yaw conditions resulting in autorotation

21
Q

Describe the actions necessary to recover from a spin

A
  1. Power to idle
  2. Neutralze ailerons
  3. Opposite rudder
  4. Forward elevator to break stall
  5. Return to level flight