Posts Tagged Columbia

Shuttle Aerodynamics

NASA now says that the drag on the left wing of Columbia is consistent with asymmetrical boundary layer transition, which it has seen on about a dozen prior occasions. The boundary layer is the part of the airflow where it changes from the freestream velocity somewhere above the surface to zero at the surface of vehicle. Boundary layers are either laminar or turbulent. In laminar boundary layers, the flow moves smoothly along lines which are essentially parallel with no mixing as you move away from the surface; in turbulent boundary layers, which are thicker and have more drag, there are eddy currents within the flow, so there is mixing and therefore increased heat transfer. 

The P-51 Mustang famously had a laminar flow airfoil. For airplanes, the flow over the wing and body is typically laminar initially and then transitions to turbulent – and one of the factors that determines where that transition occurs is surface roughness. One part of wind tunnel testing is to make sure that the boundary layer transitions on the subscale model in the same location as it would on the full scale, full Reynolds number vehicle. Transition strip, which is a strip of high surface roughness, is placed in the location where this occurs so that aerodynamics measured will correspond to the flight vehicle. Apparently the flow over the space shuttle wing starts outs totally laminar, and then later transitions to mostly turbulent. What happened with Columbia (and other flights) was that one wing was rougher than the other, and thus that wing transitioned from laminar to turbulent much sooner, leading to higher temperatures and higher drag on that wing. The drag meant that the control rockets had to be used more to correct for the induced yaw, and in the past NASA’s worry was that the control rockets would run out of fuel before the shuttle landed. So could the asymmetric transition itself have led to to the loss of Columbia? NASA doesn’t think so, and I have to believe the engineers who designed it wouldn’t have let a predictable occurrence like that have caused a vehicle failure. Of course, combined with another failure, it could have been a contributing factor.

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Columbia Ave Atque Vale

The space shuttle Columbia blew up today, killing the seven astronauts on board. It is a sad day for all of us, but especially for the friends and family of the astronauts. The space shuttle, and the space station for that matter, get very little news coverage anymore, unless something goes wrong. Space has become routine, so they say. It’s not routine for the brave souls who rocket into space on a pillar of fire and return riding a wave of white hot plasma. It’s not routine for all the people who work hard with the safety of those brave souls in mind. It’s not routine for all of us who understand the hard work, dedication, and yes, risk taking associated with scientific and engineering advancement. I’m sure NASA will figure out what happened, if they don’t already know, and it will be fixed, and we will return to routine. When I was a kid, I wanted to be a fighter pilot and an astronaut. Lousy eyesight and motion sickness ended those dreams. But I continue to dream about human exploration and advance into space – the final, unending, still beckoning frontier.

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