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Flight Performance Maneuver Planning for NASA’s X-57 “Maxwell” Flight Demonstrator - Part 1: Power-Off Glides
Author(s) -
Nicholas K. Borer,
D. E. Cox,
Ryan Wallace
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
aiaa aviation 2019 forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2019-2855
Subject(s) - aerospace engineering , aeronautics , power (physics) , computer science , physics , engineering , quantum mechanics
Distributed Electric Propulsion technology is expected to yield up to a fivefold increase in high-speed cruise efficiency for NASA’s X-57 “Maxwell” flight demonstrator when compared to a combustion-powered general aviation baseline. A portion of this increased efficiency is due to beneficial aero-propulsive interaction inherent to the distributed propulsion architecture. The measure of the relative increase in efficiency between a conventional and distributed propulsion wing will be extracted from comparisons between flight test data from the electrically powered X-57 Mod II configuration with a conventional wing, and from the electrically powered X-57 Mod III/IV configuration with a distributed propulsion wing. Flight test maneuvers that accommodate errors in instrumentation and the flight test environment are developed to establish the power-off drag characteristics for all X-57 configurations. Analysis of these maneuvers with typical errors, including pilot-in-the-loop simulation data that incorporates simulated atmospheric turbulence effects, shows that the proposed poweroff flight maneuvers can generate accurate power-off drag predictions for the X-57. These predictions show that the power-off differences in aerodynamic performance between the conventional and distributed propulsion configurations can be accurately measured from flight test data in the presence of typical data error sources.

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