Aero Handbook: Difference between revisions
From GTMS
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====Conservation of Momentum==== | ====Conservation of Momentum==== | ||
Newton’s Third Law provides a simple way to intuit aerodynamics: conservation of momentum. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. When the car pushes air up, the air pushes the car down and creates downforce – momentum transfer. This can be derived from Reynold’s Transport Theorem for Momentum, which, for a control volume with one inlet and one outlet at constant density, simplifies to <math> F_{net} = \rho(V_{out}^2 A_{out} - V_{in}^2 A_{in}) = (\dot{m}_{out})V_{out} - (\dot{m}_{in})V_{in} </math>, where F and V are vectors. | Newton’s Third Law provides a simple way to intuit aerodynamics: conservation of momentum. For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. When the car pushes air up, the air pushes the car down and creates downforce – momentum transfer. This can be derived from Reynold’s Transport Theorem for Momentum, which, for a control volume with one inlet and one outlet at constant density, simplifies to <math> F_{net} = \rho(V_{out}^2 A_{out} - V_{in}^2 A_{in}) = (\dot{m}_{out})V_{out} - (\dot{m}_{in})V_{in} </math>, where F and V are vectors. | ||
For example, take air moving under a wing to be a control volume. Assume the velocity and area at the inlet and outlet of the control volume are the same. As air enters the control volume, it moves horizontally. As it leaves the control volume, it moves vertically. Applying the above equation with the given assumptions means <math>F_{net} = \dot{m}*v</math> forward and up, so the force acting on the wing is down and back, creating equal amounts of downforce and pressure drag. | |||
=Design Methods= | =Design Methods= | ||