A Comparison of Theoretical and Experimental Pressure Distributions at High Speed About the N.A.C.A. 4412 Airfoil
Author: Moyers, Frank Neff
Year: 1940
Degree: Master's thesis
Advisor: von Kármán, Theodore
Committee Member: Unknown, Unknown
Option: Aeronautics
DOI: 10.7907/YTRV-NM88
Abstract
The general problem of aerodynamics is the determination of the forces and moments imposed on a stationary body immersed in a moving fluid. The problem is soluble if a mathematical calculation of the velocity distribution throughout the fluid can be made. The application of certain restrictions facilitates the calculation. Without great loss of usefulness we may restrict the motion to a steady, uniform, and rectilinear flow from infinity. With considerable loss of usefulness but with tremendous simplification in calculation we may add the further restrictions that the fluid be non-viscous and incompressible. Upon these assumptions the problem may be solved by utilizing two physical relationships, namely, the equations of motion and continuity.
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