Radiative and Total Heat Transfer Measurements to a Titan Explorer Model
Author(s) -
Bianca R. Capra,
Richard G. Morgan
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
14th aiaa/ahi space planes and hypersonic systems and technologies conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2006-7934
Subject(s) - titan (rocket family) , radiative transfer , atmospheric radiative transfer codes , heat transfer , thermal radiation , astrobiology , environmental science , atmospheric model , remote sensing , atmospheric sciences , aerospace engineering , meteorology , physics , geology , mechanics , thermodynamics , engineering , optics
Radiative and total heat transfer at the flow stagnation point of a 1:40.8 binary scaled model of the Titan Explorer vehicle were measured in the X3 expansion tube. Results from the current study illustrated that with the addition of CH4 into a N2 test gas radiative heat transfer could be detected. For a test gas of 5% CH4 and 95% N2, simulating an atmospheric model for Titanic aerocapture, approximately 4% of the experimentally measured total stagnation point heat transfer was found to be due to radiation. This was in comparison to < 1% measured for a test gas of pure nitrogen. When scaled to the flight vehicle, experimental results indicate a 64% contribution of radiation (test gas 5% CH4/95% N2). Previous numerical results however have predicted this contribution to be between 80-92%. Thus, experimental results from the current study suggest that numerical analyses are over-predicting the radiative heat transfer on the flight vehicle
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