Title: Aerodynamic Characteristics at Mach Number 2.05 of a Series of Highly Swept Arrow Wings Employing Various Degrees of Twist and Camber
Abstract: A series of arrow wings employing various degrees of twist and camber were tested in the Langley 4- by 4-foot supersonic pressure tunnel. Aerodynamic forces and moments in pitch were measured at a Mach number of 2.05 and at a Reynolds number of 4.4 x 10(exp 6) based on the mean aerodynamic chord. Three of the wings, having a leading-edge sweep angle of 70 deg. and an aspect ratio of 2.24, were designed to produce a minimum drag (in comparison with that produced for other wings in the family) at lift coefficients of 0. 0.08, and 0.16. A fourth and a fifth wing, having a 75 deg. swept leading edge and an aspect ratio of 1.65, were designed for lift coefficients of 0 and 0.16, respectively. A 70 deg. swept arrow wing with twist and camber designed for an optimum loading at a lift coefficient considerably less than that for maximum lift-drag ratio gave the highest lift-drag ratio of all the wings tested a value of 8.8 compared with a value of 8.1 for the corresponding wing without twist and camber. Two twisted and cambered wings designed for optimum loading at the lift coefficient for maximum lift-drag ratio gave only small increases in maximum lift-drag ratios over that obtained for the corresponding flat wings. However, in all cases, the lift-drag ratios obtained were far below the theoretical estimates.
Publication Year: 1960
Publication Date: 1960-10-01
Language: en
Type: article
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Cited By Count: 28
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