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USM3D Simulations of Saturn V Plume-Induced Flow Separation
Author(s) -
Karen Deere,
Alaa Elmiligui,
Khaled S. Abdol-Hamid
Publication year - 2012
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.a32122
Subject(s) - aerospace engineering , spacecraft , separation (statistics) , spacecraft design , space (punctuation) , saturn , missile , systems engineering , space vehicle , flow (mathematics) , space exploration , plume , computer science , engineering , astrobiology , environmental science , physics , meteorology , planet , mechanics , machine learning , astrophysics , operating system
*† ‡ The NASA Constellation Program included the Ares V heavy lift cargo vehicle. During the design stage, engineers questioned if the Plume Induced Flow Separation (PIFS) that occurred along Saturn V rocket during moon missions at some flight conditions, would also plague the newly proposed rocket. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was offered as a tool for initiating the investigation of PIFS along the Ares V rocket. However, CFD best practice guidelines were not available for such an investigation. In an effort to establish a CFD process and define guidelines for Ares V powered simulations, the Saturn V vehicle was used because PIFS flight data existed. The ideal gas, computational flow solver USM3D was evaluated for its viability in computing PIFS along the Saturn V vehicle with F-1 engines firing. Solutions were computed at supersonic freestream conditions, zero degree angle of attack, zero degree sideslip, and at flight Reynolds numbers. The effects of solution sensitivity to grid refinement, turbulence models, and the engine boundary conditions on the predicted PIFS distance along the Saturn V were discussed and compared to flight data from the Apollo 11 mission AS-506.

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