Aero Handbook: Difference between revisions
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====Bernoulli's Equation==== | ====Bernoulli's Equation==== | ||
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<math>P_{1}+\frac{1}{2}\rho v_{1}^2 + \rho gh_{1} =</math> Bernoulli's Constant | <math>P_{1}+\frac{1}{2}\rho v_{1}^2 + \rho gh_{1} =</math> Bernoulli's Constant | ||
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Bernoulli’s Equation relates speed to static pressure along a streamline, or the path of an air particle. We assume variations in the gravity term to be negligible. Bernoulli’s constant is the total pressure along a streamline. To balance the equation, pressure and velocity must be inversely proportional to each other; therefore, as one increases, the other decreases. In the pipe example above, the pressure at point 2 would be less than the pressure at point 1 because velocity increases from point 1 to point 2. | Bernoulli’s Equation relates speed to static pressure along a streamline, or the path of an air particle. We assume variations in the gravity term to be negligible. Bernoulli’s constant is the total pressure along a streamline. To balance the equation, pressure and velocity must be inversely proportional to each other; therefore, as one increases, the other decreases. In the pipe example above, the pressure at point 2 would be less than the pressure at point 1 because velocity increases from point 1 to point 2. | ||
====Types of Pressure and Force==== | |||
Bernoulli's Equations may be expressed as: | |||
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Static Pressure + Dynamic Pressure + Gravitational Pressure = Total Pressure | |||
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;Static Pressure | |||
:Static Pressure is what we measure as acting on surfaces and is what creates downforce. It can be directly measured with pressure taps with inlets normal to airflow, such as sticking through a surface, normal to it. | |||
;Dynamic Pressure | |||
:Dynamic Pressure is the pressure associated with the movement of air and represents kinetic energy. It can be measured through a pressure tap oriented tangent to airflow. Think if it as the pressure a wall perpendicular to airflow would feel as air particles constantly collide with it, transferring their kinetic energy to the wall. | |||
;Gravitational Pressure | |||
:Gravitational Pressure is pressure due to the depth of the fluid. Because air is light and the change in elevation is very small, we often ignore variations in gravitational pressure. | |||
;Body Forces | |||
:A body force acts on the entire fluid. Gravity or magnetic forces are examples of a body force. | |||
;Surface Forces | |||
:This is what we care about. These act on the surfaces against the fluid, such as a wing. | |||
;Lift | |||
:The component of the aerodynamic force pushing the system up. In our case, lift is negative | |||
;Pressure Drag | |||
:The component of the aerodynamic force, excluding skin friction, which pulls the system backwards. | |||
;Skin Friction | |||
:The shear force between the boundary layer (defined below) and respective surface, slowing the air down and leading to drag. | |||
=Design Methods= | =Design Methods= | ||