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On the Minimum Induced Drag of Ground-Effect Wings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 June 2016

P. R. Ashill*
Affiliation:
Cranfield Institute of Technology*
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Summary

An approximate theory, which yields the minimum induced drag of a planar wing with end-plates in ground effect, is presented. As a check on the accuracy of the method, it is compared with the exact linearised theory in the case of end-plates of vanishing depth (planar configuration). This shows that, within the limitations of the linearised lifting-surface theory, the present method is accurate in the range of wing heights of interest. In Section 5 the theory is compared with experiment. In this comparison two interpretations of the theory are employed. The first assumes that the vortex trace is the projection of the trailing edge of the configuration onto a plane normal to the direction of motion when the wing incidence is zero. The second is different from this only in that no constraint is placed on the wing incidence. Of the two interpretations the first is found to be in better agreement with experiment than the second for the planar configuration. However, the opposite is found to be true when end-plates of sufficient depth are fitted. A reason for this is proposed in Section 5.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society. 1970

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References

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