söndag 29 maj 2011

Mathematical Secret of Flight 1

Computed Lift and Drag of a 3d NACA0012 wing for different angles of attack by Unicorn (blue) compared with different experiments.

My talk on June 15 at Svenska Mekanikdagar 2011, is now available for preview as
describing joint work with Johan Hoffman and Johan Jansson.

Based on accurate solution of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations we identify the true mechanism for the generation of large lift L at small drag D of a wing with lift to drag quotient L/D of size 10 - 50, which is not described in the literature.

We combine the Navier-Stokes equations with a slip boundary condition on the wing motivated by the experimental fact that the skin friction is small for a slightly viscous fluid such as air or water, and we exhibit the role the slip condition in two crucial aspects:
  • prevention of separation at the crest of the wing generating large lift
  • 3d slip-separation at the trailing edge not destroying large lift and causing small drag.
Text books claim following Prandtl, named the father of modern fluid mechanics, that both lift and drag result from a boundary layer arising from a no-slip condition.

We obtain lift and drag in full accordance with experiments by solving the Navier-Stokes equations with a slip condition, which does not generate any boundary layer, and we thus present strong evidence that lift and drag do not originate from any boundary layer.

In short, we show that solutions to the Navier-Stokes equations with slip are computable and
correctly capture the physics of (subsonic) flight. See also

  • To solve the Navier-Stokes equations for, say, the flow over an airplane requires a finely spaced computational grid to resolve the smallest eddies.
  • Consider a transport airplane with a 50-meter-long fuselage and wings with a chord length (the distance from the leading to the trailing edge) of about five meters. If the craft is cruising at 250 meters per second at an altitude of 10,000 meters, about 10 quadrillion (10^16) grid points are required to simulate the turbulence near the surface with reasonable detail.
Kim and Moin express the necessity dictated by Prandtl to resolve thin boundary layers to correctly compute lift and drag of a wing or an entire airplane, which would require 50 years of Moore's law to increase the computing power with a factor 10^10 to reach the dictated 10^16 points.

We show that this is possible already today using 10^6 points by using slip without boundary layers to resolve.

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