Computational and Experimental Unsteady Pressures for Alternate SLS Booster Nose Shapes
Author(s) -
Greg Brauckmann,
Craig L. Streett,
William L. Kleb,
Stephen J. Alter,
Kelly J. Murphy,
Christopher E. Glass
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
53rd aiaa aerospace sciences meeting
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2015-0559
Subject(s) - booster (rocketry) , computer science , materials science , aerospace engineering , engineering
Delayed Detached Eddy Simulation (DDES) predictions of the unsteady transonic flow about a Space Launch System (SLS) configuration were made with the Fully UNstructured Three-Dimensional (FUN3D) flow solver. The computational predictions were validated against results from a 2.5% model tested in the NASA Ames 11-Foot Transonic Unitary Plan Facility. The peak Cp,rms value was under-predicted for the baseline, Mach 0.9 case, but the general trends of high Cp,rms levels behind the forward attach hardware, reducing as one moves away both streamwise and circumferentially, were captured. Frequency of the peak power in power spectral density estimates was consistently under-predicted. Five alternate booster nose shapes were assessed, and several were shown to reduce the surface pressure fluctuations, both as predicted by the computations and verified by the wind tunnel results.
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