Aerodynamics
is the study of how gases interact with moving bodies. Because the gas that we
encounter most is air, aerodynamics is primarily concerned with the forces of
drag and lift, which are caused by air passing over and around solid bodies.
Engineers apply the principles of aerodynamics to the designs of many different
things, including buildings, bridges and even soccer balls; however, of primary
concern is the aerodynamics of aircraft and automobiles.
Aerodynamics
comes into play in the study of flight and the science of building and
operating an aircraft, which is called aeronautics. Aeronautical engineers use
the fundamentals of aerodynamics to design aircraft that fly through the
Earth's atmosphere.
The
most significant aerodynamic force that applies to nearly everything that moves
through the air is drag. Drag is the force that opposes an aircraft's motion
through the air, according to NASA. Drag is generated in the
direction the air is moving when it encounters a solid object. In most cases,
such as in automobiles and aircraft, drag is undesirable because it takes power
to overcome it. There are, however, some cases when drag is beneficial, such as
with parachutes, for example.
To
describe the amount of drag on an object, we use a value called the drag
coefficient (cd). This number depends not only on the shape of the object but
also on other factors, such as its speed and surface roughness, the density of
the air and whether the flow is laminar (smooth) or turbulent. Forces that
affect drag include the air pressure against the face of the object, the
friction along the sides of the object and the relatively negative pressure, or
suction, on the back of the object. For example, cdfor a
flat plate moving face-on through the air is about 1.3, a face-on cube is about
1, a sphere is about 0.5 and a teardrop shape is about 0.05. The drag
coefficient for modern automobiles is 0.25 to 0.35, and for aircraft it is 0.01
to 0.03. Calculating cd can be complicated. For this reason, it is usually
determined by computer simulations or wind tunnel experiments.
In
order to overcome drag forces, an aircraft must generate thrust. This is
accomplished with a motor-driven propeller or a jet engine. When the airplane
is in level flight at a constant speed, the force of the thrust is just enough
to counteract the aerodynamic drag.
Moving
air can also generate forces in a different direction from the flow. The force
that keeps an airplane from falling is called lift. Lift is generated by an
aircraft wing. The path over a wing's curved top is longer than the path along
the flat bottom of the wing. This causes the air to move faster over the top
than it does along the bottom. With all other factors being equal, faster
moving air has lower pressure than slower moving air, according to Bernoulli's
principle, stated by Daniel Bernoulli, one of the most important
pioneers in the field of fluid dynamics. This difference is what allows the
slower moving air to push up against the bottom of the wing with greater force
than the faster moving air is pushing down against the top of the wing. In
level flight, this upward force is just enough to counteract the downward force
caused by gravity.
Aerodynamic
forces are also used to control an aircraft in flight. When the Wright brothers
made their first flight in 1903, they needed a way to control their aircraft to
climb, descend, bank and turn. They developed what is known as three-axis
control for pitch, roll and yaw. Pitch (nose pointing up or down) is controlled
by an elevator (the "flaps") on the back or trailing edge of the
horizontal stabilizer in the tail section. Roll (tilting left or right) is
controlled by ailerons (also flaps) on the trailing edges of the wings near the
tips. Yaw (nose pointing left or right) is controlled by the rudder on the
trailing edge of the vertical stabilizer in the tail section. These controls
employ Newton's Third Law of Motion because they generate force by deflecting
the airflow in the opposite direction of the desired movement. This force is
also what allows aerobatic planes to fly upside down.
A
pilot may also use flaps on the inboard section of the trailing edge of the
wing during takeoff and landing. When in
the downward position, flaps increase both lift and drag to allow the plane to
fly slower without stalling. Some larger aircraft can also extend slats on the
front or leading edges of the wings to increase lift at low speeds.
When
the smooth airflow over a plane's wing is disrupted and this reduces the amount
of lift, a stall can occur. According to the Federal Aviation Administration's
Airplane Flying Handbook, "This is caused when the wing exceeds its
critical angle of attack. This can occur at any airspeed, in any attitude, with
any power setting." Typically, most stalls occur when an aircraft is
moving too slowly with the nose at too high of an upward angle. The air no
longer flows along the top surface but instead breaks away and forms turbulent
swirls on top of the wing. This causes the plane to lose lift and start to
fall, sometimes rather abruptly.
Another
thing that can happen in an airplane is a spin. The Airplane Flying Handbook
defines a spin as "an aggravated stall that results in what is termed
'autorotation' wherein the airplane follows a downward corkscrew path."
This usually occurs in a slow turn when the slower inside wing stalls, and the
outside wing is still generating lift. "Especially at low altitude,
successful spin recovery may be difficult if not impossible in many
aircraft," according to Scot Campbell, a doctoral candidate in Aerospace Engineering
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Donald Talleur, an assistant chief flight instructor at the
University of Illinois Institute of Aviation, writing in "The Aerodynamics
of a Spin," for the Canadian Owners and Pilots Association. One reason for
this is the danger of going into a flat spin in which both wings and all of the
control surfaces are stalled, and the aircraft falls like a maple tree seed.
When a fluid is moving faster, it has lower pressure. This principle
explains the lift created by an airplane’s wing.
Credit: NASA Quest.