Flight Testing Activities
Flight Testing Activities
Or
Websites:
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/forces.html
Forces of flight
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How to Explain Bernoulli's Theorem Experiment to Kids | eHow.com
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Aerospace Activities and Lessons
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K12/TRC/Aeronautics/AeronauticActivitiesHome2.htm
Aeronautics Classroom Activities
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/aerores.htm
Aerospace Resources
http://women.nasa.gov/a2i/
Women in Science, Technology, Engineering & Math Careers Info
Source: NASA
the y-axis, roll rotation, where one wing rotates up or down, is around the x-axis,
and yaw rotation, where the nose rotates right or left, is around the z-axis. The 3
pictures on the right side of the previous page show these rotations.
What Is Performance?
Once we know what an axis system is, we can describe how the aircraft performs
in the air. Performance refers to the motion of the airplane along its flight path,
forward and aft, up or down, right or left, as described on the axis system. The
term "Performance" also refers to how fast, how slow, how high and how far. It
may also refer to the ability of an airplane to successfully do its job, or what it is
trying to accomplish. Performance includes such items as minimum and
maximum speed, maximum altitude, maximum rate of climb, maximum range and
speed, rate that fuel is used, distance to take-off and land, and the weight of what it
can carry.
What Are Flight Test Maneuvers?
Maneuvers are the motions of the aircraft done by the pilot to determine aircraft
performance. A maneuver is a translational or rotational motion of the aircraft
during a flight test to obtain performance data. There are specific test maneuvers
which are used to measure these performance qualities for each airplane.
Sometimes, flight testing is a competition to select the best airplane to do a
particular job. All of the performance measurements are strongly affected by
differences in the weather conditions, such as temperature, pressure, humidity, and
wind.
What Is a Flight Envelope?
Source:
NASA
Figure 2
Any slower and the aircraft will stall and begin to fall. The right edge of the
orange graph is the maximum speed the aircraft can fly at that altitude due to
engine power. The very top of the orange graph shows the maximum altitude for
the aircraft. The flight envelope is determined by obtaining flight test data.
What is Stability?
Stability refers to the rotational motion of an airplane about its three axes; roll,
pitch, and yaw. "Stability" is defined as the tendency of an object to return to its
initial position when it is disturbed or moved from its initial position.
What Is a Stable Condition?
Figure 3 shows the three cases of
stability. In case (3a), a marble
placed in the bottom of a shallow
trough is said to be stable. When
moved, the marble will tend to return
to that resting place at the bottom of
the trough. It may overshoot and
move (or oscillate) back and forth,
but it will continue to seek the lowest
point in the trough (see the red line in
the trough). Static stability is a
Source: NASA
Figure 3
measure of how quickly the marble
will return to the bottom of the trough. A trough with steep sides will result in a
higher level of static stability for the marble than one with shallow sides. This
motion that results from a statically stable condition is called "oscillatory".
What Is a Neutral Condition?
If we set the marble on a flat table (Figure 3b), there is no tendency for it to return
to its initial position. The marble will stay in any location that it is placed on the
table. This condition is called "neutral stability". The motion resulting from a
condition of neutral stability is called "non-oscillatory".
imposed by the gravitational pull of the earth. Five gs in a maneuver means that
5 times the gravitational force of the earth is felt by the airplane and the pilot.
Flight tests of other aircraft, such as a passenger plane, experiences much lower
gs while in flight.
Fact Sheet
Flight Testing
"Forces of Flight"
Four Forces of Flight
Lift, thrust, weight, drag
Sir Isaac Newton (1642 - 1727)
First presented his three laws of motion in the "Principia Mathematica
Philosophiae Naturalis" in 1686.
Newton's Laws of Motion
Newton's First Law of Motion states that a body at rest will remain at
rest unless an outside force acts on it, and a body in motion at a constant
velocity will remain in motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an
outside force.
The Second Law of Motion states that if an unbalanced force acts on a
body, that body will experience acceleration ( or deceleration), that is, a
change of speed.
The Third law of Motion states that for every action force there is
always an equal and opposite reaction force.
Bernoulli's Principle
States that an increase in the speed of moving air or a flowing fluid is
accompanied by a decrease in the air or fluid's pressure.
Flight Testing
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