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Aerodynamics—Aircraft and Missiles

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2016

P. J. Duncton*
Affiliation:
Weapon Division, Fairey Aviation Co. Ltd.

Extract

Many may expect the major emphasis to be given to problems of design of manned aircraft for supersonic flight. Of these, there will be some more qualified to speak on supersonic aircraft matters than I am, for my own experience in supersonic aerodynamics has been predominantly in the guided weapon field. Perhaps this is no disadvantage, for I believe that the aircraft designer has much that he can learn from the guided weapon designer.

Aircraft and missiles have much in common; for both are, or are intended to be, vehicles for conveying efficiently a payload through the air from one point to another. The fact that, in military applications at least, “efficiently” often means “as quickly as possible,” gives rise to a requirement for supersonic speeds in both aircraft and missiles.

Type
Supersonic Flight
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1956

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References

1.Staff, Supersonics Division, Flight Section R.A.E. (1954). Flight Trials of a Rocket-propelled Transonic Research Model. The R.A.E.-Vickers Rocket Model. Parts I to IV, R.& M. No. 2835, 1954.Google Scholar
2. Hamilton, J. A. and Hufton, P. A. (1956). Free Flight Techniques for High Speed Aerodynamic Research. Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, Vol. 60, p. 151, 1956.Google Scholar
3. Warren, C. H. E. (1956). Recent Advances in the Knowledge of Transonic Air Flow. Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, Vol. 60, p. 241, 1956.Google Scholar
4.R.Ae.S. Data Sheets, S.00.03.17-20, April 1955.Google Scholar
5. Monaghan, R. J. (1955). On the Behaviour of Boundary Layers at Supersonic Speeds. Fifth International Aeronautical Conference, Los Angeles, p. 277. Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences, New York, 1956.Google Scholar