Aerodynamic Measurements of a Gulfstream Aircraft Model With and Without Noise Reduction Concepts
Author(s) -
Dan Neuhart,
Judith Han,
Mehdi R. Khorrami
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
28th aiaa/ceas aeroacoustics 2022 conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-2477
Subject(s) - aerodynamics , noise reduction , noise (video) , reduction (mathematics) , aerospace engineering , aircraft noise , computer science , aeronautics , acoustics , automotive engineering , engineering , physics , artificial intelligence , mathematics , image (mathematics) , geometry
Steady and unsteady aerodynamic measurements of a high-fidelity, semi-span 18% scale Gulfstream aircraft model are presented. The aerodynamic data were collected concurrently with acoustic measurements as part of a larger aeroacoustic study targeting airframe noise associated with main landing gear/flap components, gear-flap interaction noise, and the viability of related noise mitigation technologies. The aeroacoustic tests were conducted in the NASA Langley Research Center 14- by 22-Foot Subsonic Wind Tunnel with the facility in the acoustically treated open-wall (jet) mode. Most of the measurements were obtained with the model in landing configuration with the flap deflected at 39 and the main landing gear on and off. Data were acquired at Mach numbers of 0.16, 0.20, and 0.24. Global forces (lift and drag) and extensive steady and unsteady surface pressure measurements were obtained. Comparison of the present results with those acquired during a previous test shows a significant reduction in the lift experienced by the model. The underlying cause was traced to the likely presence of a much thicker boundary layer on the tunnel floor, which was acoustically treated for the present test. The steady and unsteady pressure fields on the flap, particularly in the regions of predominant noise sources such as the inboard and outboard tips, remained unaffected. It is shown that the changes in lift and drag coefficients for model configurations fitted with gear/flap noise abatement technologies fall within the repeatability of the baseline configuration. Therefore, the noise abatement technologies evaluated in this experiment have no detrimental impact on the aerodynamic performance of the aircraft model.
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