The Science of Flight
The Science of Flight
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                                   The                Science                         of
                                                                                                 Flight
                                                                Peter P. Wegener
On        17 December             1903, in the presence of five local                    1804 Sir George Cayley                           the first modern
                                                                                                                            suggested
witnesses,        Orville and Wilbur Wright made                          the first      airplane configuration by separating propulsion?usual
  flights in history in a powered, heavier-than-air machine                              ly flapping wings?and            fixed lifting surfaces (3). The
   (Fig. 1).   In   the     sand    dunes    of   Kill  Devil    Hills,    about   4                learned    from   Otto    Lilienthal in Germany and
                                                                                        Wrights
miles      south of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina,                             an old       their friend Octave Chanute            in the United States, who
 dream of man                 finally became         a
                                                         reality. Orville?as            developed hang gliders, includingbiplane types (1, 4).
 directed by the toss of a coin?piloted                     the first successful        Lilienthal designed a wing profile that was adopted by
  flight   of    the    day.     Wilbur       steadied       the   craft   on    the     the Wrights      to produce greater lift?the aerodynamic
  launching       rail   by holding         onto     the   right wing.       A   12      force  that  sustains   an aircraft in flight (Fig. 2).
 horsepower           engine designed by the Wright brothers,                                 The Wrights         showed      themselves      to be brilliant
 driving two large propellers via chains, pushed the first                               engineers full of original ideas on all aspects of flight.
Wright Flyer through the air for 12 seconds over a                                      Although       they were      largely self-taught, we must not
 distance of 120 feet, less than the length of a modern                                 view the brothers as merely backwoods                    tinkerers. In
  jetliner. On the fourth and last flight                                                                        addition to building an exceptionally
 of the morning, now with Wilbur at
                                                                                                                  light internal-combustion           engine,
  the controls, about 850 feetwere tra
                                                                                                                  they hit upon        the ingenious       idea,
 versed in 59 seconds, foreshadowing                                   The development                           based on their observation of birds,
                                                               offlyingmachines
  the rapid advance                that would        be                                                          of controlling the warp of the outer
  come characteristic of aviation. [Be
                                                                                                                  trailing edge of the wing by cables.
  cause it is still in                          use    in         has                     a  central                     scheme achieved attitude con
                              widespread                                  occupied                               This
                                                           positionin thehistory
  the field of aviation, the British sys                                                                          trol about the roll or longitudinal axis
  tem of measurement                 will be used                                                                of the airplane, and itwas theWright
  throughout this article.]                                of technologyover the                                 brothers' unique contribution to the
        Looking         back on the famous                                                                                          of flying machines       (2).
                                                                                                                 development
 day,    Gibbs-Smith,            the  foremost      his                     past     century                     Their   preeminence     was truly remark
  torian of early flight, is moved                     to ?                            ^ ???
                                                                                                                 able. It took until November               1907
 quote
           a
               turn-of-the-century
                                             human                                                               before a one-minute          flight was
                                                                                                                                                             ac
  ist, SirWalter Raleigh: "It is not extravagant to say that                             complished by Henry            Farman      near  Paris,   while     the
  the 17th of December              1903 . . .marks the beginning of a                  Wrights had flown over 30 minutes by 1905 (5).
 new era in the
                        history of theworld" (2).Who could have                               The development of flyingmachines has occupied a
  foreseen in 1903 that within one lifetime the modest                                   central position in the history of technology over the past
 beginnings at Kitty Hawk would lead to aircraft crossing                                century. Aeronautics        has benefited from research in a
  the Atlantic in three hours at twice the speed of sound,                              number of areas of science and technology. In turn, it
widebody           jets carrying hundreds                of people halfway              has contributed to innovations of benefit to other fields.
 around the globe without stopping, and spacecraft cen                                  First there is the continuing quest for lightmaterials of
  tering   the   atmosphere          in  fiery hypersonic flight?                       great strength to build resilient structures. Material sci
        The Wrights were not the firstmen to fly. Balloons                              ence combines with
                                                                                                                      aeroelasticity,    the study of the
 and gliders had carried men off the ground formore                                     dynamics of aircraft structures (6). The development                  of
  than a hundred years before the historic flight. Others                                internal-combustion engines of low weight per unit of
had attempted to get powered airplanes off the ground,                                  power, followed by the development                of the jet engine
 but without success. The Wrights were the first to start                               and rocket propulsion, has provided the push needed
 and land at the same level in true powered, sustained,                                  for air- and spacecraft (7). This has led to increased
 and controlledflight(2). They had studiedand profited efforts in chemistry and process technology to handle
 by thework of their antecedents and contemporaries. In                                 esoteric fuels. The field of avionics involves the design of
                                                                                        electronic components and computers to operate guid
                                                                                        ance systems,
                                                                                                              flight control, and airport approach.
                                                                                        Among     all  these  disciplines, aerodynamics stands out; it
 Peter P. Wegener is theHarold
                                     Hodgkinson Professor of Engineering and
          Science  at  Yale               Educated  at  the                       he
                                                                                        dominates the shape of a flying machine. Together with
Applied                      University.                   University of Berlin,
worked at theUS Naval Ordnance                                                           the propulsion      system and structural materials,           it gov
                                         Laboratory and theCaltech JetPropulsion
                                                                                        erns   the                                         an
 Laboratory before joining the Yale faculty in 1960. His research interests                        weight, speed,        and   range   of      airplane. Our
  include the application of
                               gasdynamics   to problems  in  chemical physics.
                                                                                         focus  will    therefore    be    on    aerodynamics?on         what
Address: Mason Laboratory, Yale
                                       University, New Haven, CT 06520.                 makes airplanes fly.
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                                                               A CENTURY     OF SCIENTIFIC       RESEARCH
How        air flows around an object                                                    speed the pressure decreases, and vice versa.
                                                                                             Using the concept of ideal?that        is, inviscid?flow,
Aerodynamics       is based on fluid dynamics, a field that                             mathematicians     developed      an extensive catalogue of
             a
displayed       strange   dichotomy at the time of the first                             streamline patterns of complex situations by the inge
 flights. The mathematical         theory of flow?ignoring        the                   nious introduction of a velocity potential. The actual flow
effects of viscosity or internal fluid friction?and               the                   velocity is expressed as the derivative of this potential
great engineering-oriented body of empirical knowledge                                  with respect to distance in the direction ofmotion. Using
of viscous fluids had developed            in parallel but had not                       this definition of velocity and applying           the law of
yet been reconciled.                                                                     conservation of mass to a moving fluid yields Laplace's
      Before looking at the problems               created by this                      equation. A mathematical       analogy to problems in elec
dichotomy,    we   need   to  set  the  contexts   inwhich we will                                       offers an  arsenal   of solutions to the La
                                                                                         tromagnetism
describe flows around objects. We will firstdeal with an                                place equation     that  benefits   aerodynamics.     Choosing
 incompressible flow of constant density, which is valid                                proper boundary conditions for a given problem with
 for air motion at speeds that do not exceed about one                                   the surface of the object defined as a streamline produces
 third of the speed of sound (760 mph at sea level). Next                               a picture
                                                                                                    showing the streamlines at and away from the
we will view flows as shown in
                                            Figures 2-5, with air                       body.   A  complete description of the flow field is finally
blown against a fixed object, as in a wind tunnel. This                                  achieved by using Bernoulli's equation to compute the
 environment is aerodynamically              identical to that of a                         corresponding         pressure    (8, 9).
body moving through         still air. We   assume    that the object                           Applying the theoryof ideal flow to bodies of
 is infinitely extended at a right angle to the flow and the                                arbitrary shape reveals a strange mathematical      result:
flow is steady?that        is, the flow speed at any point is                               objects do not experience drag, a fact that obviously
 independent     of  time.  From the law of conservation of                                 contradicts our experience. We can readily understand
mass we deduce         that if the flow is constricted in the                               this contradiction, which is called d'Alembert's paradox,
vicinity of an object, it speeds up. Bernoulli's equation                                   by looking at the cross-flow around the cylinder in
  links the velocity to the pressure field; at higher flow                                  Figure 3a. The streamlines mirror the symmetry of the
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                                                                             SIGMA XI
                                                                                                                                                    to a stop at
                                                                                            object; the center streamline brings the flow
                                                                                            the forward stagnation point. A second stagnation point
                                                                                            arises at the back. The pressure distribution is perfectly
                                                                                            balanced,     and thus, since drag is computed from the
                                                                                            integral    of  pressure,     there is no air resistance. The
                                                                                             identical result is found for the integration of the asym
                                                                                           metric pressure forces on an airfoil.
                                                                                                  The parallel but largely unrelated development                in
                                                                                            fluid mechanics      concerns the study of real flows. From
                                                                                           work       in ancient times on agricultural irrigation and
                                                                                            aqueducts      to the construction of pipelines and steam
                                                                                                                                                   a great deal
                                                                                            engines and the rise of process technology,
                                                                                            had become known about the handling of viscous fluids.
                                                                                            Osborne Reynolds clarified the nature of the two modes
                                                                                            ofmotion of real fluids?laminar           and turbulent flow?in
                                                                                            his study of pipe flow (10). In laminar flow, shear forces
                                                                                            are
                                                                                                  governed by the molecular mechanism              of viscosity;
                                                                                             in turbulent flow, the momentum                 transfer between
                                                                                                                                                       motions
                                                                                            adjacent layers is dominated by erratic, random
                                                                                            of the fluid (8). Such irregular motion is seen in the flow
                                                                                                                                                                in
                                                                                             issuing from smokestacks, in themovement of clouds
                                                                                                   winds,    and   in  the  swirl  in a stirred cup of coffee.
                                                                                            high
Figure 2. The lift of
                            an airplane's wings       sustains the airplane     in          Turbulent flows produce higher shear forces, which we
                      its weight. A wing        at an angle of attack a exposed             will soon encounter on airfoils. Reynolds found that an
flight, opposing
                                                                              an air
to an airflow experiences         forces that, when       integrated, show                                                                at high speeds. The
force R acting on the center of pressure CP. This force has two
                                                                                              initially laminar flow turns turbulent
                                                                                              transition between the two regimes is governed by the
                  the drag D opposite         the direction of flight, and the lift
components,                                                                                  ratio of the inertial to the viscous forces acting on a given
L at a right angle.
                                                                                                                    fluid element. This ratio?now          called
                                                                                                                     the Reynolds number?is            given by
                                                                                                                    Re = VZ/v. Here V is the flow speed
                                                                                                                    and I a characteristic length. The de
                                                                                                                    nominator v, the ratio of viscosity to
                                                                                                                                                     an incom
                                                                                                                    density, is a constant in
                                                                                                                    pressible   flow.
                                                                   (a)                                                     The Reynolds number is of fun
                                                                                                                    damental      importance, since it gov
                                                                                                                     erns similitude, the basis of model
                                                                                                                     testing. If the Reynolds numbers of
                                                                                                                     an
                                                                                                                         airplane and its scale model in the
                                                                                                                    wind tunnel are the same, the flow
                                                                                                                     patterns around prototype and mod
                                                                                                                     el will be identical. Forces such as lift
                                                                                                                     and drag are measured        on the mod
                                                                                                                     el. Their value ismade dimensionless
                                                                                                                                          a characteristic area
                                                                                                                    by division with
                                                                                                                     and Bernoulli's dynamic pressure (p/
                                                                                                                     2)V2, with p as density, to find the lift
                                                                   (b)                                               and drag coefficients cL and cD.
                                                                                                                    These     coefficients apply equally to
                                                                                                                      the full-scale prototype, whose drag
                                                                                                                     and liftcan now be computed. There
                                                                                                                     are various methods        by which       the
                                                                                                                                  number    of  a small model
                                                                                                                     Reynolds
                                                                                                                     can be made       identical to that of its
 Figure    3. The   field  of fluid  dynamics     displayed    a strange dichotomy      at the time of the first
                                                                                                                     prototype; increasing the wind           tun
                                                                                        on one side and the
 flights, with the concept of ideal flow developed               by mathematicians                                   nel speed is one of them. Reynolds
 results of centuries of practical experience with real flows on the other side. The dichotomy
                                                                                                                     numbers of flying objects, ranging
  is illustrated by the streamline patterns and graphs of distribution                of surface pressure around
                                                                                                                     from floating dust particles through
 a cylinder in cross flow. In ideal flow (a), which neglects viscosity,                symmetrical streamlines
                                                                                                                      insects, birds, and small planes           to
  form around the cylinder axis. The real flow (b) looks identical to the ideal flow in front.
                                                                                                                                  and               cover   about
 Near     the midpoint     of the cylinder, however,         the flow separates    from the cylinder's surface,       large jets        airships,
 and an                                 arises. This                    is caused       the formation of a thin       ten orders of magnitude,        from 10-1
         asymmetrical   pattern                phenomenon                    by
 boundary   layer in which    the flow is brought to rest with     respect    to the surface. A net drag   is   to 109 (22).
 computed   from the distribution    of pressure.                                                                    Itwas     left to Ludwig       Prandtl     to
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                                                            A CENTURY     OF SCIENTIFIC         RESEARCH
 Figure 5. A sequence    of ideal flows similar to that shown in Figure 4 demonstrates   how lift is produced  on a wing. In (a), the basic flow
 around the wing    includes a rearward stagnation point?the    location of zero speed?on    the upper surface. An imaginary circulatory flow
 around the wing    (b) is added. The result yielded by this combination   is shown in (c). The flow speed on the upper surface is higher than
 that on the lower  surface, the pressure   is lower, and    lift is generated.   The    strength of the circulation         is chosen    to fulfill the Kutta   condition   of
 smooth   flow at the trailing edge.
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                                                                                  SIGMA XI
 Figure   6. The process by which    the circulation around a wing     is                (Fig.5a), since an impossiblyhigh flow speedwould be
 actually created has two stages. As the wing       is set in motion (a), the            required for the air to round the trailing edge. Kutta
 pattern of ideal flow shown     in Figure 5a is quickly established                     suggested that a specific value of the circulation of Figure
 before the effects of viscosity alter the streamline pattern. At the                    5b must be chosen for smooth steady flow to exist at the
 trailing edge is formed a starting vortex, which is shed and moves
                                                                                         trailingedge of thewing with equal flow speeds on the
 back from the wing    (b). The smooth flow shown in Figure 5c is
                                                                                        upper and lower surfaces. This important idea, the
 established.
                                                                                        unique contribution of its originator, is now called the
                                                                                        Kutta condition (17). If its criteria are met, the pattern of
                                                                                        Figure 5c emerges. From Bernoulli's equation we find
whose     spinning shells deviate from trajectories located                              that the pressure on the bottom surface is higher than
 in a plane. It applies equally to spheres. The trajectories                             that on the top surface, generating lift.The lift force per
of the golf ball, the tennis ball, and the pitchers curve                               unit width of the infinitely extended wing can be com
ball come tomind (16).                                                                  puted from the product of the exact value of the circula
      The mathematician Wilhelm Kutta, stimulated by
Lilienthal's glider flights, arrived independently     at a
 theoryof lift in 1902. He was                                followed by Nikolai       The basis ofmodern aerodynamics was
Zhukovsky, whose work was generally overlooked at                                       set out in the uncommonly short period
 the time (17). A fascinating sequence of debates and
misunderstandings       arose, all fortunately ignored by the
                                                                                        from1902 to 1904
practitioners   of flight, who already knew thatwings do
provide       Kutta
          lift.        originated themathematics     for lifton
airfoils in ideal flow. He added an imaginary circulatory                               tion that ensures the Kutta condition, the air speed, and
 flow to thebasic flow around thewing predictedby ideal                                 the air density. The remarkably dose        agreement of
 theory (Fig. 5). The             strength of the vortex surrounding                    calculated lift values and those measured      proves that
                                                                                        ideal flow theory successfully predicts lift.
                                                                                            With these discoveries, the basis ofmodern aerody
                                                                                        namics was    set out in the uncommonly       short period
                                      air speed
                                                                                        from 1902 to 1904. The theory of liftwas quantified in
                           -*                                                            1902, the firstflightstookplace in 1903,and idealflow
                                                                                        theory was reconciled with the observation of real flow
                                                                                        by means of the concept of the boundary layer in 1904.
                                                                                        The questions of whether the imaginary vortex around
                                                                                         the airfoil really exists, how the finitewings of an actual
                                                                                        airplane behave, and how drag can be explained were
                                                                                        answered over a much longer period of time?into              the
                                                                                         1920s?again     with   Lanchester   and  Prandtl  and  his col
                                                                                         leagues in the forefront. An established technology of
                                                                                        aircraft and their associated systems arose concurrently,
                                                                                        and aeronautics changed our modes             of transportation
                                                                                        profoundly,     altered  the pursuit  of war,  opened up once
                                                                                         inaccessible regions of the earth, and removed the last
                                                                                        uncharted areas from our maps.
                                                                                              To pursue the story of lift to its end, we must now
                                                                                         find a physical explanation for circulation. Turning from
 Figure   7. A     closer view   of the upper surface of the profile shown in
          6b reveals     the presence    of a thin, turbulent boundary
                                                                                         the wind-tunnel view of air flow, we will consider the
 Figure                                                                 layer.
 The distributionof velocity shows the rapidlychangingair speed                         unsteady, time-dependent flow around an airplane start
  from the surface, where   it is zero, to the edge of the boundary  layer.              ing from rest. As the airplane begins to roll down the
 The  strong  shear creates vortices   as shown; these eddies continually                runway, the flow of Figure 6a for ideal theory actually
  feed the circulation      set up around         the wing.
                                                                                        appears. The air from below the trailing edge moves
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                                                      A CENTURY    OF SCIENTIFIC     RESEARCH
By using an engine to push a fixedwing through the identical vortex motion from the outside to the inside of the loop.
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                                                                                         SIGMA XI
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                                                    A CENTURY    OF SCIENTIFIC      RESEARCH
                                                                  are
composite picture shows that ships and rail transport                     Douglas      DC-6          1947           105,000              315            72.0
Every squarefootof thewing ofa B-747                                      right angle to the leading edge. That crucial component
                                                                          is determined by the Mach number of flight times the
can support about 40 bricks, or three                                     cosine of the angle of sweep, typically 30? or so. In turn
fully loadedsuitcases
                                                                          the flight speed can be increased before the criticalMach
                                                                         number is reached. If a straight wing has a criticalMach
                                                                         number of 0.7, a 30? sweepback moves         this value up to
 increased speed are represented by the wing loading.                     0.8.
This figure tells us the weight per unit area of wing                            A more recent discovery that has further eased the
surface that can be lifted into the air. Every square foot of             problems    of transonic flow brings us to the forefront of
thewing of a B-747 can support about 40 bricks, or three
fully loaded suitcases (7). These dramatic developments
have led to revolutionary changes in public transporta
 tion (Fig. 12). After a peak during World War II, railroad
 traffic in the United States dropped by four-fifths to
about 20 billion passenger-miles     in 1957, a year inwhich
 rail, bus, and air traffichad equal volumes. Since then,
 flying has far outdistanced other modes of public trans
                                      rose markedly with the
portation. International air traffic
 jet age;  US  airlines         a  large portion of the total
                         supply
volume.
wings     (9). Addressing     this problem, Adolf Busemann                 line). The    circle marks      the year when US    rail, bus,    and air traffic
had suggested abandoning           the straight wing and intro             had   the same mileage.          (After ref. 32.)
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                                                                               SIGMA XI
current aerodynamics. A new wing contour was pro                                     air compression?appear;           they propagate       through the
posed by Richard Whitcomb, who had pioneered               the                       atmosphere     and  are modified     by  it, not unlike   light rays
design of airfoils in conjunction with new fuselage                                  passing    through a nonuniform medium.                 These   two
shapes that increase efficiency above the critical Mach                              conical waves     create a sonic boom, a nearly instanta
                                               a
number (27). Whitcomb's     design includes      slight curva                        neous pressure rise sweeping            the ground surface at
ture at the top of the nearly flat airfoil and a thin trailing                       supersonic speed, alarming humans and animals and
edge. This shape, the so-called supercritical wing section                           damaging structures. Such undesirable side effects have
 (Fig. 13), has now been brought to a high degree of                                  led to congressional     legislation to ban supersonic flight
perfection, in part as a result of the success of calcula                            over land. Intensive research to find aerodynamic config
tions in numerical fluid dynamics involving high-speed                               urations that operate shock-free at supersonic speeds has
computers (28, 29). The flow over the top of the wing                                not been successful, and consequently             the attention of
exhibits an extended supersonic zone terminated by a                                 aeronautical engineers has in part been redirected to
                                                                                      transonic flow.
                                                                                           Supersonic    flightwith its associated changes of air
Improvements in ground transportation                                                density   involves
                                                                                                 iswarmed
                                                                                                          thermodynamics; the air in the bound
                                                                                                              in comparison with the surrounding
are clearlyneeded ifwe are to takefull                                               ary layer
                                                                                                                                                        is
                                                                                     atmosphere.     The  surface   temperature of the Concorde
advantage of aeronautical innovations                                                higher than the boiling point of water; the metal skin
                                                                                                 in flight, and the airplane is elongated by 9
                                                                                     expands
                                                                                      inches (30). At flight speeds above Mach number 2 (the
weak shock leading to negligible separation. Additional,                              speed at which the Concorde          travels), aluminum alloys
albeit manageable,        problems arise at the thin trailing                         lose their strength and can no longer be used. The skin
edge   and   wing tips (21), but economical flight close to                           temperature of the space shuttle rises substantially above
 the speed of sound is now possible.            In fact, the first                    the surface temperature of the sun as the shuttle reenters
airplanes incorporating these findings are now joining                                the earth's atmosphere at hypersonic Mach numbers.
 the fleets of the airlines.                                                          Insulating materials,      the well-known        tiles, shield the
      Parallel to the development of transonic aircraft has                           interior during the short time of exposure to extreme
proceeded      the design of supersonic airplanes such as the                         rates of heat transfer. Yet powered            commercial flight
British-French Concorde         and military aircraft of various                     under such conditions is being seriously considered as a
 sizes (25). Supersonic      aerodynamics     is a mature disci                      prospect for the future.
pline.  Then    why    do  we   not  have  a fleet of supersonic
airliners? The answer is suggested in part by the photo
                                                                                     Future of commercial flying
graph in Figure 14 showing the flow field around a rifle
bullet moving at supersonic speed, whose Mach number                                 From theWright Flyer to the Concorde, with flights to
 is a little above that at which some years back the US                              the moon    including two passages     through the earth's
 supersonic     transport was      designed    to travel. Strong                     atmosphere,    aeronautics and   astronautics  have made
 shock waves?extremely          narrow discontinuities of rapid                      tremendous progress in just one lifetime. Who        could
                                                                                     have foreseen such an evolution in such a short period?
                                                                                     Based on this experience, it is daring to speculate on the
                                                                                     future of commercial flying, yet some thoughts may
                                                                                     suggest possible developments.
                                                                                           It is safe to predict a continuation of the trend in
                                                                                      improvements directed toward lower cost per passen
                                                                                     ger-mile at equal or higher speed. Such improvements
                                                                                     will concentrate on reducing drag by modifying wing
                                                                                      tips, improving engines, using lighter materials,          and
                                                                                                even   retaining laminar boundary layers   over   the
                                                                                     possibly
                                                                                                                                                    a
                                                                                     wings.    Improved supercritical wings, combined with
                                                                                     waisted fuselage to hold the total cross section constant
                                                                                     along the length of the craft, will yield lower drag
                                                                                     economically at higher speed (28, 29). Airliners will then
                                                                                     be able to fly close toMach number one, a speed gain of
                                                                                     about 10 to 15%, giving a substantial advantage for very
                                                                                      long flights. However,      the currently prevailing cruising
                                                                                      speed ofMach number 0.8 for long-range transports will
 Figure 13. A new shape, the so-called    supercritical wing section, has            most likely be retained for many years. The ease of
 been developed    to lower the drag encountered     by a plane flying at
 transonic speeds. Note    the smaller curvature of the upper surface                 scheduling and the advantages of safe trafficcontrol?in
                                                                                                                                       as the Atlan
 and  the thin trailing edge. This shape produces    a well-controlled,              particular over heavily traveled routes such
                          flow region on the upper surface. Because     the
                                                                                     tic?are    self-evident.
 extended   supersonic
                       terminates  in a weak shock wave,        minor                      The often-invoked criterion of speed has serious
 supersonic   region                                       only
                         followed                  reattachment of the                limitations. Speed is not feltby people; time and comfort
 separation    occurs,             by immediate
 boundary   layer. The       resultis high liftwith relatively low drag at           of travel dominate our responses. The airplane designer
 high subsonic Mach         numbers.                                                 K?chemann        studied the frequency of marriages      in Ox
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                            ???????i?                             A CENTURY      OF SCIENTIFIC      RESEARCH      ?
here that incentives          to  turn    to  new       tip and   near   the origin of the turbulent wake            that trails the projectile. An aircraft flying at
                                                        the same speed at high altitude generates             a similar pattern of shock waves, which               extend
 types of aircraft and other means of
               are                   The     small      through    the  atmosphere    to  the  ground,    where       they cause the sudden,        sharp pressure pulses
 transport            important.                        that are called sonic booms.        (Photograph      by the author.)
 airplanes used by commuter airlines
 are subject to the vicissitudes                  of
weather.      Short takeoff and landing
 craftpowered by propjets have proved to be uneconomi
 cal. Research in the future should be directed to develop                           References
                                                                                       1. C. H. Gibbs-Smith.              1963. The Wright Brothers. London:            H. M.
 ing large airplanes        that   can   rise  vertically    and    can    also
                                                                                           Stationery Office.
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                                                             All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions