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Thermal effects influencing measurements in a supersonic blowdown wind tunnel
Author(s) -
Djordje Vuković,
Dijana Damljanović
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
thermal science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.339
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 2334-7163
pISSN - 0354-9836
DOI - 10.2298/tsci160404175v
Subject(s) - boiler blowdown , wind tunnel , airspeed , hypersonic wind tunnel , supersonic wind tunnel , environmental science , instrumentation (computer programming) , mach number , meteorology , wind speed , supersonic speed , mechanics , engineering , aerospace engineering , inlet , mechanical engineering , physics , computer science , operating system
During a supersonic run of a blowdown wind tunnel, temperature of air in the test section drops which can affect planned measurements. Adverse thermal effects include variations of the Mach and Reynolds numbers, variation of airspeed, condensation of moisture on the model, change of characteristics of the instrumentation in the model, et cetera. Available data on thermal effects on instrumentation are pertaining primarily to long-run-duration wind tunnel facilities. In order to characterize such influences on instrumentation in the models, in short-run-duration blowdown wind tunnels, temperature measurements were made in the wing-panel-balance and main-balance spaces of two wind tunnel models tested in the T-38 wind tunnel. The measurements showed that model-interior temperature in a run increased at the beginning of the run, followed by a slower drop and, at the end of the run, by a large temperature drop. Panel-force balance was affected much more than the main balance. Ways of reducing the unwelcome thermal effects by instrumentation design and test planning are discussed

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