Finite Volume Numerical Methods for Aeroheating Rate Calculations from Infrared Thermographic Data
Author(s) -
Kamran Daryabeigi,
Scott A. Berry,
Thomas Horvath,
Robert Nowak
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of spacecraft and rockets
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.758
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1533-6794
pISSN - 0022-4650
DOI - 10.2514/1.14500
Subject(s) - spacecraft , aerospace engineering , missile , volume (thermodynamics) , space (punctuation) , space exploration , systems engineering , spacecraft design , space technology , mechanical engineering , infrared , computer science , engineering , physics , optics , quantum mechanics , operating system
The use of multi-dimensional finite volume numerical techniques with finite thickness models for calculating aeroheating rates from measured global surface temperatures on hypersonic wind tunnel models was investigated. Both direct and inverse finite volume techniques were investigated and compared with the one-dimensional semi -infinite technique. Global transient surface temperatures were measured using an infrared thermographic technique on a 0.333-scale model of the Hyper-X forebody in the Langley Research Center 20-Inch Mach 6 Air tunnel. In these tests the effectiveness of vortices generated via gas injection for initiating hypersonic transition on the Hyper-X forebody were investigated. An array of streamwise orientated heating striations were generated and visualized downstream of the gas injection sites. In regions without significant spatial temperature gradients, one-dimensional techniques provided accurate aeroheating rates. In regions with sharp temperature gradients due to the striation patterns two- dimensional heat transfer techniques were necessary to obtain accurate heating rates. The use of the one- dimensional technique resulted in differences of ±20% in the calculated heating rates because it did not account for lateral heat conduction in the model. Nomenclature
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