Cycle II.5 aircraft aero-optical turbulent boundary-layer/shear-layer measurements
Abstract
The aero-optical effects associated with propagating a laser beam through aircraft turbulent boundary layers and shear layers were examined. Observed laser optical performance levels were compared with those inferred from aerodynamic measurements of unsteady densities and correlation lengths within these random flows. Optical instrumentation included a fast shearing interferometer (FSI). A 9 cm diameter collimated helium neon laser beam made a double pass through the aircraft random flow via an airfoil mirror located one meter from the fuselage. Typical aircraft turbulent boundary layer thickness measured 0.3 meters. Averaging many FSI generated modulation transfer functions (MTFs) and Fourier transforming, this average yields the expected far field intensity degradation associated with an aircraft mounted laser system. Aerodynamic instrumentation included fine wire probes to measure unsteady temperature and mass flux. A laser doppler velocimeter measured unsteady velocity within the flows. An analysis of these data yielded point measurements of unsteady density and correlation length.
- Publication:
-
Electromagnetic Wave Propagation from Aircraft
- Pub Date:
- April 1980
- Bibcode:
- 1980ewpa.nasa..465G
- Keywords:
-
- C-135 Aircraft;
- Lasers;
- Shear Layers;
- Turbulent Boundary Layer;
- Flow Distribution;
- Fourier Transformation;
- Fuselages;
- Laser Doppler Velocimeters;
- Transfer Functions;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer