Proceedings of the Aircraft Wake Vortices Conference Held in Washington, DC on October 29-31, 1991. Volume 2, Papers 30-55

Proceedings of the Aircraft Wake Vortices Conference Held in Washington, DC on October 29-31, 1991. Volume 2, Papers 30-55
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 588
Release: 1992
Genre:
ISBN:

This volume contains the proceedings of the international conference of Aircraft Wake Vortices held at the Quality Hotel Capitol Hill, Washington, DC, on October 29-31, 1991. The contributed papers discuss technological advances in the knowledge of the phenomenon, its effect on aircraft and airport capacity, detection techniques, and vortex avoidance schemes.

Proceedings of the Aircraft Wake Vortices Conference Held in Washington, DC on October 29-31, 1991. Volume 1, Papers 1-29

Proceedings of the Aircraft Wake Vortices Conference Held in Washington, DC on October 29-31, 1991. Volume 1, Papers 1-29
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 526
Release: 1992
Genre:
ISBN:

This volume contains the proceedings of the international conference of Aircraft Wake Vortices held at the Quality Hotel Capitol Hill, Washington, DC, on October 29-31, 1991. The contributed papers discuss technological advances in the knowledge of the phenomenon, its effect on aircraft and airport capacity, detection techniques, and vortex avoidance schemes.

Proceedings of the Aircraft Wake Vortices Conference, March 15-17, 1977, Held at the Transportation Systems Center, Kendall Square, Cambridge, MA.

Proceedings of the Aircraft Wake Vortices Conference, March 15-17, 1977, Held at the Transportation Systems Center, Kendall Square, Cambridge, MA.
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 353
Release: 1977
Genre:
ISBN:

This volume contains the proceedings of a conference on aircraft wake vortices. The contributed papers discuss technological advances in the knowledge of the phenomenon, its effects on aircraft, alleviation techniques, and vortex avoidance systems designed to permit decreases in delays at major airports.

Wake Turbulence

Wake Turbulence
Author: National Research Council
Publisher: National Academies Press
Total Pages: 102
Release: 2008-04-27
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0309113792

Without major changes, the current air transportation system will be unable to accommodate the expected increase in demand by 2025. One proposal to address this problem is to use the Global Positioning System to enable aircraft to fly more closely spaced. This approach, however, might be limited by the wake turbulence problem, which can be a safety hazard when smaller aircraft follow relatively larger aircraft too closely. To examine how this potential hazard might be reduced, Congress in 2005 directed NASA to request a study from the NRC to assess the federal wake turbulence R&D program. This book provides a description of the problem, an assessment of the organizational challenges to addressing wake turbulence, an analysis of the technical challenges in wake turbulence, and a proposal for a wake turbulence program plan. A series of recommendations for addressing the wake turbulence challenge are also given.

Aircraft Wake Turbulence and Its Detection

Aircraft Wake Turbulence and Its Detection
Author: John Olsen
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 599
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1468483463

The combination of increasing airport congestion and the ad vent of large transports has caused increased interest in aircraft wake turbulence. A quantitative understanding of the interaction between an aircraft and the vortex wake of a preceding aircraft is necessary for planning future high density air traffic patterns and control systems. The nature of the interaction depends on both the characteristics of the following aircraft and the characteristics of the wake. Some of the questions to be answered are: What deter mines the full characteristics of the vortex wake? What properties of the following aircraft are important? What is the role of pilot response? How are the wake characteristics related to the genera ting aircraft parameters? How does the wake disintegrate and where? Many of these questions were addressed at this first Aircraft Wake Turbulence Symposium sponsored by the Air Force Office of Sci entific Research and The Boeing Company. Workers engaged in aero dynamic research, airport operations, and instrument development came from several count ries to present their results and exchange information. The new results from the meeting provide a current picture of the state of the knowledge on vortex wakes and their interactions with other aircraft. Phenomena previously regarded as mere curiosities have emerged as important tools for understanding or controlling vortex wakes. The new types of instability occurring within the wake may one day be used for promoting early dis integration of the hazardous twin vortex structure.