Unsteady Skin-Friction Measurements on a Maneuvering DARPA2 Suboff Model

Abstract

The skin-friction magnitude was measured for steady and unsteady flow over a Suboff submarine model by surface hot-film constant temperature sensors. The locations of the local spatial minima in the skin-friction magnitudes are used to obtain the separation locations. Steady surface static pressures were measured at 100 and 200 angles of attack. The dynamic plunge-pitch-roll model mount (DyPPiR) in the Stability Wind Tunnel was used to simulate rapid pitch-up maneuvers, which are a linear ramp from 10 to 27 deg in 0.33 seconds, for the bare-body and sail-on-side cases at Re(t)=5.5 x 1,000,000. Steady results show a cross-flow separation structure on the leeward side of the bare-body. In the sail-on-side case, the separation pattern of the non-sail region follows the bare-body separation trends; on the sail side it is strongly affected by the presence of the sail-body junction and its horseshoe-vortex type separation. Unsteady results of the bare-body and the non-sail region of the sail-on-side case show a different separation topology from the steady flow separation structure and significant time lags, which are described by a first-order time lag model. The unsteady separation pattern of the sail side does not follow the quasi-steady data with a time lag.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 15, 2001
Accession Number
ADA395632

Entities

People

  • Roger L. Simpson
  • Serhat Hosder

Organizations

  • Virginia Tech

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Sensors
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Aircrafts
  • Boundary Layer
  • Composite Materials
  • Computational Fluid Dynamics
  • Convection
  • Differential Equations
  • Dynamic Pressure
  • Flow Visualization
  • Fluid Flow
  • Geometry
  • Heat Transfer
  • Measurement
  • Pressure Distribution
  • Pressure Measurement
  • Static Pressure
  • Three Dimensional
  • Wind Tunnels

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery.
  • Fluid Mechanics and Fluid Dynamics.
  • Marine Hydrodynamics