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Ramjet

A ramjet, or athodyd (aero thermodynamic duct), is a form of airbreathing jet engine that uses the forward motion of the engine to produce thrust. Since it produces no thrust when stationary (no ram air) ramjet-powered vehicles require an assisted take-off like a rocket assist to accelerate it to a speed where it begins to produce thrust. Ramjets work most efficiently at supersonic speeds around Mach 3 (2,300 mph; 3,700 km/h) and can operate up to speeds of Mach 6 (4,600 mph; 7,400 km/h).

Simple ramjet operation, with Mach numbers of flow shown

Ramjets can be particularly useful in applications requiring a small and simple mechanism for high-speed use, such as missiles. The US, Canada, and UK had widespread ramjet powered missile defenses during the 1960s onward, such as the CIM-10 Bomarc and Bloodhound. Weapon designers are looking to use ramjet technology in artillery shells to give added range; a 120 mm mortar shell, if assisted by a ramjet, is thought to be able to attain a range of 35 km (22 mi).[1] They have also been used successfully, though not efficiently, as tip jets on the ends of helicopter rotors.[2]

Ramjets differ from pulsejets, which use an intermittent combustion; ramjets employ a continuous combustion process.

As speed increases, the efficiency of a ramjet starts to drop as the air temperature in the inlet increases due to compression. As the inlet temperature gets closer to the exhaust temperature, less energy can be extracted in the form of thrust. To produce a usable amount of thrust at yet higher speeds, the ramjet must be modified so that the incoming air is not compressed (and therefore heated) nearly as much. This means that the air flowing through the combustion chamber is still moving very fast (relative to the engine), in fact it will be supersonic—hence the name supersonic-combustion ramjet, or scramjet.

History

Cyrano de Bergerac

L'Autre Monde: ou les États et Empires de la Lune (Comical History of the States and Empires of the Moon) (1657) was the first of three satirical novels written by Cyrano de Bergerac that are considered among the first science fiction stories. Arthur C Clarke credited this book with conceiving of the ramjet,[3] and being the first fictional example of a rocket-powered space flight.

René Lorin

The ramjet was conceived in 1913 by French inventor René Lorin, who was granted a patent for his device. Attempts to build a prototype failed due to inadequate materials.[4] His patent FR290356 showed a piston internal combustion engine with added 'trumpets' as exhaust nozzles. [1]

Albert Fonó

In 1915, Hungarian inventor Albert Fonó devised a solution for increasing the range of artillery, comprising a gun-launched projectile which was to be united with a ramjet propulsion unit, thus giving a long range from relatively low muzzle velocities, allowing heavy shells to be fired from relatively lightweight guns. Fonó submitted his invention to the Austro-Hungarian Army, but the proposal was rejected.[5] After World War I, Fonó returned to the subject of jet propulsion, in May 1928 describing an "air-jet engine" which he described as being suitable for high-altitude supersonic aircraft, in a German patent application. In an additional patent application, he adapted the engine for subsonic speed. The patent was granted in 1932 after four years of examination (German Patent No. 554,906, 1932-11-02).[6]

Soviet Union

In the Soviet Union, a theory of supersonic ramjet engines was presented in 1928 by Boris Stechkin. Yuri Pobedonostsev, chief of GIRD's 3rd Brigade, carried out a great deal of research into ramjet engines. The first engine, the GIRD-04, was designed by I.A. Merkulov and tested in April 1933. To simulate supersonic flight, it was fed by air compressed to 20,000 kilopascals (200 atm), and was fueled with hydrogen. The GIRD-08 phosphorus-fueled ramjet was tested by firing it from an artillery cannon. These shells may have been the first jet-powered projectiles to break the speed of sound.

In 1939, Merkulov did further ramjet tests using a two-stage rocket, the R-3. That August, he developed the first ramjet engine for use as an auxiliary motor of an aircraft, the DM-1. The world's first ramjet-powered airplane flight took place in December 1940, using two DM-2 engines on a modified Polikarpov I-15. Merkulov designed a ramjet fighter "Samolet D" in 1941, which was never completed. Two of his DM-4 engines were installed on the Yak-7 PVRD fighter, during World War II. In 1940, the Kostikov-302 experimental plane was designed, powered by a liquid fuel rocket for take-off and ramjet engines for flight. That project was cancelled in 1944.

In 1947, Mstislav Keldysh proposed a long-range antipodal bomber, similar to the Sänger-Bredt bomber, but powered by ramjet instead of rocket. In 1954, NPO Lavochkin and the Keldysh Institute began development of a Mach 3 ramjet-powered cruise missile, Burya. This project competed with the R-7 ICBM being developed by Sergei Korolev, and was cancelled in 1957.

Russia

On 1 March 2018 President Vladimir Putin announced Russia had developed a nuclear powered ramjet cruise missile capable of extended long range flight. It has been designated 9M730 "Burevestnik" (Petrel) by Russia and has the NATO reporting name SSC-X-9 "Skyfall".[7] On 9 August 2019, an explosion and release of radioactive material was recorded at the State Central Navy Testing Range. Recovery efforts were underway to raise a test article which had landed in the White Sea during testing in 2018 when the nuclear power source of the missile detonated and killed 5 researchers.[8]

Germany

In 1936, Hellmuth Walter constructed a test engine powered by natural gas. Theoretical work was carried out at BMW and Junkers, as well as DFL. In 1941, Eugen Sänger of DFL proposed a ramjet engine with a very high combustion chamber temperature. He constructed very large ramjet pipes with 500 millimetres (20 in) and 1,000 millimetres (39 in) diameter and carried out combustion tests on lorries and on a special test rig on a Dornier Do 17Z at flight speeds of up to 200 metres per second (720 km/h). Later, with petrol becoming scarce in Germany due to wartime conditions, tests were carried out with blocks of pressed coal dust as a fuel (see e.g. Lippisch P.13a), which were not successful due to slow combustion.[9]

United States

 
An AQM-60 Kingfisher, the first production ramjet to enter service with the US military

Stovepipe (flying/flaming/supersonic) was a popular name for the ramjet during the 1950s in trade magazines such as Aviation Week & Space Technology[10] and other publications such as The Cornell Engineer[11] and the Journal Of The American Rocket Society.[12] The simplicity implied by the name came from a comparison with the turbojet engine which also has, together with the inlet, combustor and nozzle of a ramjet, complex and expensive spinning turbomachinery (compressor and turbine).

The US Navy developed a series of air-to-air missiles under the name of "Gorgon" using different propulsion mechanisms, including ramjet propulsion on the Gorgon IV. The ramjet Gorgon IVs, made by Glenn Martin, were tested in 1948 and 1949 at Naval Air Station Point Mugu. The ramjet engine itself was designed at the University of Southern California and manufactured by the Marquardt Aircraft Company. The engine was 2.1 metres (7 ft) long and 510 millimetres (20 in) in diameter and was positioned below the missile.

In the early 1950s the US developed a Mach 4+ ramjet under the Lockheed X-7 program. This was developed into the Lockheed AQM-60 Kingfisher. Further development resulted in the Lockheed D-21 spy drone.

In the late 1950s the US Navy introduced a system called the RIM-8 Talos, which was a long range surface-to-air missile fired from ships. It successfully shot down several enemy fighters during the Vietnam war, and was the first ship-launched missile to destroy an enemy aircraft in combat. On 23 May 1968, a Talos fired from USS Long Beach shot down a Vietnamese MiG at a range of about 105 kilometres (65 mi). It was also used as a surface-to-surface weapon and was modified to destroy land-based radars.[citation needed]

Using the technology proven by the AQM-60, In the late 1950s and early 1960s the US produced a widespread defense system called the CIM-10 Bomarc, which was equipped with hundreds of nuclear armed ramjet missiles with a range of several hundred miles. It was powered by the same engines as the AQM-60, but with improved materials to withstand the longer flight times. The system was withdrawn in the 1970s as the threat from bombers was reduced.

THOR-ER

In April 2020, the U.S. Department of Defense and the Norwegian Ministry of Defense jointly announced their partnership to develop advanced technologies applicable to long range high-speed and hypersonic weapons. The Tactical High-speed Offensive Ramjet for Extended Range (THOR-ER) program completed a solid fuel ramjet (SFRJ) vehicle test in August 2022.[13]

United Kingdom

 
A Bloodhound on display at the RAF Museum, Hendon, London.

In the late 1950s and early 1960s the UK developed several ramjet missiles.

A project called Blue Envoy was supposed to equip the country with a long range ramjet powered air defense against bombers, but the system was eventually cancelled.

It was replaced by a much shorter range ramjet missile system called the Bloodhound. The system was designed as a second line of defense in case attackers were able to bypass the fleet of defending English Electric Lightning fighters.

In the 1960s the Royal Navy developed and deployed a ramjet powered surface to air missile for ships called the Sea Dart. It had a range of 65–130 kilometres (40–80 mi) and a speed of Mach 3. It was used successfully in combat against multiple types of aircraft during the Falklands War.

Fritz Zwicky

Eminent Swiss astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky was research director at Aerojet and holds many patents in jet propulsion. U.S. patents 5121670 and 4722261 are for ram accelerators. The U.S. Navy would not allow Fritz Zwicky to publicly discuss his own invention, U.S. Patent 2,461,797 for the Underwater Jet, a ram jet that performs in a fluid medium. Time magazine reported Fritz Zwicky's work in the articles "Missed Swiss" on 11 July 1955[14] and "Underwater Jet" in the 14 March 1949 issue.[15]

France

 
Leduc 010

In France, the works of René Leduc were notable. Leduc's Model, the Leduc 0.10 was one of the first ramjet-powered aircraft to fly, in 1949.

The Nord 1500 Griffon reached Mach 2.19 (745 m/s; 2,680 km/h) in 1958.

Engine cycle

 
Brayton cycle

Air as it passes through a ramjet duct changes state (eg changes in temperature, pressure, volume) as it is compressed, heated and expanded in a thermodynamic cycle known as the Brayton cycle. This cycle also applies to the gas turbine engine. For a fixed amount of air its change in state is represented with pairs of quantities on diagrams, usually temperature~entropy or pressure~volume. The cycle is named after George Brayton, the American engineer who developed it, although it was originally proposed and patented by Englishman John Barber in 1791.[16] It is also sometimes known as the Joule cycle.

Design

 
A typical ramjet

The first part of a ramjet is its diffuser (compressor) in which the forward motion of the ramjet is used to raise the pressure of its working fluid (air) as required for the combustion of fuel. It is then passed through a nozzle to accelerate it to supersonic speeds. This acceleration gives the ramjet forward thrust.

A ramjet is much less complex than a turbojet in so far as it comprises an air intake, a combustor, and a nozzle but no turbomachinery. Normally, the only moving parts are those in the fuel pump, which sends the fuel to the spray nozzles in the combustor (liquid-fuel ramjet). Solid-fuel ramjets are simpler with no need for a fuel system.

By way of comparison, a turbojet uses a compressor driven by a turbine. This type of engine produces thrust when stationary because the high velocity air required to produce compressed air (i.e. ram air in a ramjet) is produced by the compressor itself (fast spinning rotor blades).

Construction

Diffusers

The diffuser is that part of the ramjet which converts the high velocity of the air approaching the intake into high (static) pressure required for combustion. High combustion pressures minimize wasted thermal energy which appears in the exhaust gases[17] (by reducing entropy rise during heat addition[18]).

Subsonic and low-supersonic ramjets use a pitot-type entrance for the inlet to capture air. This is followed by a widening internal passage (subsonic diffuser) to achieve a lower subsonic velocity which is required at the combustor. At low supersonic speeds a normal (plane) shock wave forms in front of the inlet.

For higher supersonic speeds the pressure loss through a normal shock wave in front of the inlet becomes prohibitive and a protruding spike or cone has to be used to produce oblique shock waves in front of a final normal shock which now occurs at the inlet entrance lip. The diffuser in this case consists of two parts, the supersonic diffuser, with its shock waves external to the inlet, followed by the internal subsonic diffuser.

At higher speeds still, part of the supersonic diffusion has to take place internally so there are external and internal oblique shock waves. The final normal shock has to occur in the vicinity of a minimum flow area known as the throat, which is followed by the subsonic diffuser.

Combustor

As with other jet engines, the combustor has to raise the temperature of the air by burning fuel. This takes place with a small pressure loss. The air velocity entering the combustor has to be low enough such that continuous combustion can take place in sheltered zones provided by flame holders.

Since there is no downstream turbine, a ramjet combustor can safely operate at stoichiometric fuel: air ratios, which implies a combustor exit stagnation temperature of the order of 2,400 K (2,130 °C; 3,860 °F) for kerosene. Normally, the combustor must be capable of operating over a wide range of throttle settings, for a range of flight speeds and altitudes. Usually, a sheltered pilot region enables combustion to continue when the vehicle intake undergoes high yaw/pitch during turns. Other flame stabilization techniques make use of flame holders, which vary in design from combustor cans to simple flat plates, to shelter the flame and improve fuel mixing. Over-fuelling the combustor can cause the final (normal) shock in the diffuser to be pushed forward beyond the intake lip, resulting in a substantial drop in engine airflow and thrust.

Nozzles

The propelling nozzle is a critical part of a ramjet design, since it accelerates exhaust flow to produce thrust.

Subsonic ramjets accelerate exhaust flow with a nozzle. Supersonic flight typically requires a convergent–divergent nozzle.

 
Bristol Thor ramjet modified for display purposes. Two Thor engines were used on the Bristol Bloodhound missile

Performance and control

Although ramjets have been run as slow as 45 metres per second (160 km/h),[19] below about Mach 0.5 (170 m/s; 610 km/h) they give little thrust and are highly inefficient due to their low pressure ratios.

Above this speed, given sufficient initial flight velocity, a ramjet will be self-sustaining. Indeed, unless the vehicle drag is extremely high, the engine/airframe combination will tend to accelerate to higher and higher flight speeds, substantially increasing the air intake temperature. As this could have a detrimental effect on the integrity of the engine and/or airframe, the fuel control system must reduce engine fuel flow to stabilize the flight Mach number and, thereby, air intake temperature to reasonable levels.

Due to the stoichiometric combustion temperature, efficiency is usually good at high speeds (around Mach 2 – Mach 3, 680–1,000 m/s, 2,500–3,700 km/h), whereas at low speeds the relatively poor pressure ratio means the ramjets are outperformed by turbojets, or even rockets.

Control

Ramjets can be classified according to the type of fuel, liquid or solid; and the booster.[20]

In a liquid fuel ramjet (LFRJ), hydrocarbon fuel (typically) is injected into the combustor ahead of a flameholder which stabilises the flame resulting from the combustion of the fuel with the compressed air from the intake(s). A means of pressurizing and supplying the fuel to the ramcombustor is required, which can be complicated and expensive. Aérospatiale-Celerg designed an LFRJ where the fuel is forced into the injectors by an elastomer bladder which inflates progressively along the length of the fuel tank. Initially, the bladder forms a close-fitting sheath around the compressed air bottle from which it is inflated, which is mounted lengthwise in the tank.[21] This offers a lower-cost approach than a regulated LFRJ requiring a turbopump and associated hardware to supply the fuel.[22]

A ramjet generates no static thrust and needs a booster to achieve a forward velocity high enough for efficient operation of the intake system. The first ramjet-powered missiles used external boosters, usually solid-propellant rockets, either in tandem, where the booster is mounted immediately aft of the ramjet, e.g. Sea Dart, or wraparound where multiple boosters are attached alongside the outside of the ramjet, e.g. 2K11 Krug. The choice of booster arrangement is usually driven by the size of the launch platform. A tandem booster increases the overall length of the system, whereas wraparound boosters increase the overall diameter. Wraparound boosters will usually generate higher drag than a tandem arrangement.

Integrated boosters provide a more efficient packaging option, since the booster propellant is cast inside the otherwise empty combustor. This approach has been used on solid, for example 2K12 Kub, liquid, for example ASMP, and ducted rocket, for example Meteor, designs. Integrated designs are complicated by the different nozzle requirements of the boost and ramjet phases of flight. Due to the higher thrust levels of the booster, a differently shaped nozzle is required for optimum thrust compared to that required for the lower thrust ramjet sustainer. This is usually achieved via a separate nozzle, which is ejected after booster burnout. However, designs such as Meteor feature nozzleless boosters. This offers the advantages of elimination of the hazard to launch aircraft from the ejected boost nozzle debris, simplicity, reliability, and reduced mass and cost,[23] although this must be traded against the reduction in performance compared with that provided by a dedicated booster nozzle.

Integral rocket ramjet/ducted rocket

A slight variation on the ramjet uses the supersonic exhaust from a rocket combustion process to compress and react with the incoming air in the main combustion chamber. This has the advantage of giving thrust even at zero speed.

In a solid fuel integrated rocket ramjet (SFIRR), the solid fuel is cast along the outer wall of the ramcombustor. In this case, fuel injection is through ablation of the propellant by the hot compressed air from the intake(s). An aft mixer may be used to improve combustion efficiency. SFIRRs are preferred over LFRJs for some applications because of the simplicity of the fuel supply, but only when the throttling requirements are minimal, i.e. when variations in altitude or Mach number are limited.

In a ducted rocket, a solid fuel gas generator produces a hot fuel-rich gas which is burnt in the ramcombustor with the compressed air supplied by the intake(s). The flow of gas improves the mixing of the fuel and air and increases total pressure recovery. In a throttleable ducted rocket, also known as a variable flow ducted rocket, a valve allows the gas generator exhaust to be throttled allowing control of the thrust. Unlike an LFRJ, solid propellant ramjets cannot flame out. The ducted rocket sits somewhere between the simplicity of the SFRJ and the unlimited throttleability of the LFRJ.

Flight speed

Ramjets generally give little or no thrust below about half the speed of sound, and they are inefficient (Specific Impulse of less than 600 seconds) until the airspeed exceeds 1,000 kilometres per hour (280 m/s; 620 mph) due to low compression ratios.

Even above the minimum speed, a wide flight envelope (range of flight conditions), such as low to high speeds and low to high altitudes, can force significant design compromises, and they tend to work best optimised for one designed speed and altitude (point designs). However, ramjets generally outperform gas turbine-based jet engine designs and work best at supersonic speeds (Mach 2–4).[24] Although inefficient at slower speeds, they are more fuel-efficient than rockets over their entire useful working range up to at least Mach 6 (2,000 m/s; 7,400 km/h).

The performance of conventional ramjets falls off above Mach 6 due to dissociation and pressure loss caused by shock as the incoming air is slowed to subsonic velocities for combustion. In addition, the combustion chamber's inlet temperature increases to very high values, approaching the dissociation limit at some limiting Mach number.

Related engines

Air turboramjet

An air turboramjet has a compressor powered by a gas heated via a heat exchanger within the combustion chamber.

Supersonic-combustion ramjets (scramjets)

Ramjet diffusers slow the incoming air to a subsonic velocity before it enters the combustor. Scramjets are similar to ramjets, but the air flows through the combustor at supersonic speed. This increases the stagnation pressure recovered from the freestream and improves net thrust. Thermal choking of the exhaust is avoided by having a relatively high supersonic air velocity at combustor entry. Fuel injection is often into a sheltered region below a step in the combustor wall. The Boeing X-43 was a small experimental ramjet[25] which achieved Mach 5 (1,700 m/s; 6,100 km/h) for 200 seconds on the X-51A Waverider.[26]

Standing oblique detonation ramjets (Sodramjets)

Standing oblique detonation ramjets (Sodramjets) replace the diffusive ramjet combustion with an oblique detonation. See also: Shcramjet Criteria for hypersonic airbreathing propulsion and its experimental verification Oblique Detonation Wave Ramjet

Precooled engines

A variant of the pure ramjet is the 'combined cycle' engine, intended to overcome the limitations of the pure ramjet. One example of this is the SABRE engine; this uses a precooler, behind which is the ramjet and turbine machinery.

The ATREX engine developed in Japan is an experimental implementation of this concept. It uses liquid hydrogen fuel in a fairly exotic single-fan arrangement. The liquid hydrogen fuel is pumped through a heat exchanger in the air intake, simultaneously heating the liquid hydrogen and cooling the incoming air. This cooling of the incoming air is critical to achieving a reasonable efficiency. The hydrogen then continues through a second heat exchanger position after the combustion section, where the hot exhaust is used to further heat the hydrogen, turning it into a very high pressure gas. This gas is then passed through the tips of the fan to provide driving power to the fan at subsonic speeds. After mixing with the air, it is burned in the combustion chamber.

The Reaction Engines Scimitar has been proposed for the LAPCAT hypersonic airliner, and the Reaction Engines SABRE for the Reaction Engines Skylon spaceplane.

Nuclear-powered ramjet

During the Cold War, the United States designed and ground-tested a nuclear-powered ramjet called Project Pluto. This system, intended for use in a cruise missile, used no combustion; a high-temperature, unshielded nuclear reactor heated the air instead. The ramjet was predicted to be able to fly at supersonic speeds for months. Because the reactor was unshielded, it was dangerous to anyone in or around the flight path of the low-flying vehicle (although the exhaust itself wasn't radioactive). The project was ultimately cancelled because ICBMs seemed to serve the purpose better.[27]

Ionospheric ramjet

The upper atmosphere above about 100 kilometres (62 mi) contains monatomic oxygen produced by the sun through photochemistry. A concept was created by NASA for recombining this thin gas back to diatomic molecules at orbital speeds to power a ramjet.[28]

Bussard ramjet

The Bussard ramjet is a spacecraft propulsion concept intended to fuse interstellar wind and exhaust it at high speed from the rear of the vehicle.

Ramjet mode for an afterburning turbojet

An afterburning turbojet or bypass engine can be described as transitioning from turbo to ramjet mode if it can attain a flight speed at which the engine pressure ratio (epr) has fallen to one. The turbo afterburner then acts as a ramburner.[29] The intake ram pressure is present at entry to the afterburner but is no longer augmented with a pressure rise from the turbomachinery. Further increase in speed introduces a pressure loss due to the presence of the turbomachinery as the epr drops below one.

A notable example was the propulsion system for the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird with an epr= 0.9 at Mach 3.2.[30] The thrust required, airflow and exhaust temperature, to reach this speed came from a standard method for increasing airflow through a compressor running at low corrected speeds, compressor bleed, and being able to increase the afterburner temperature as a result of cooling the duct and nozzle using the air taken from the compressor rather than the usual, much hotter, turbine exhaust gas.[31]

Aircraft using ramjets

Missiles using ramjets

See also

  • Wikibooks: Jet propulsion

References

  1. ^ McNab, Chris; Keeter, Hunter (2008). "Death from a Distance Artillery". Tools of Violence: Guns, Tanks and Dirty Bombs. Oxford, United Kingdom: Osprey Publishing. p. 145. ISBN 978-1846032257. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  2. ^ . TIME. Time Inc. 26 November 1965. Archived from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 8 April 2008.
  3. ^ Liukkonen, Petri. . Books and Writers (kirjasto.sci.fi). Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015.
  4. ^ Zucker, Robert D.; Oscar Biblarz (2002). Fundamentals of gas dynamics. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0-471-05967-6.
  5. ^ Gyorgy, Nagy Istvan (1977). "Albert Fono: A Pioneer of Jet Propulsion" (PDF). International Astronautical Congress. IAF/IAA.
  6. ^ Dugger, Gordon L. (1969). Ramjets. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. p. 15.
  7. ^ "https://twitter.com/nktpnd/status/1064991343624237059". Twitter. Retrieved 24 January 2023. {{cite web}}: External link in |title= (help)
  8. ^ "Russian nuclear engineers buried after 'Skyfall nuclear' blast". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  9. ^ Hirschel, Ernst-Heinrich; Horst Prem; Gero Madelung (2004). Aeronautical Research in Germany. Springer. pp. 242–243. ISBN 3-540-40645-X.
  10. ^ https://archive.org/details/Aviation_Week_1950-02-06, p.22
  11. ^ "The Cornell Engineer 1951-03: Vol 16 Iss 6". Cornell University. March 1951.
  12. ^ https://archive.org/details/sim_american-rocket-society-ars-journal_1949-12_79, p.163
  13. ^ "Tactical High-speed Offensive Ramjet for Extended Range (THOR-ER) Team Completes Ramjet Ve".
  14. ^ "Missed Swiss". Time Inc. 11 July 1955. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  15. ^ "Underwater Jet". Time Inc. 14 March 1949. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  16. ^ "Massachusetts Institute of Technology Gas Turbine Lab". Web.mit.edu. 27 August 1939. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  17. ^ https://archive.org/details/sim_journal-of-aircraft_1976-04_13_4/mode/2up, "Propulsive Efficiency from an Energy Utilization Standpoint"
  18. ^ "On The Thermodynamic Spectrum Of Airbreathing Propulsion", page 2, Carl Builder,AIAA ^4-243,1st AIAA Annual meeting,Washington DC, June 1964
  19. ^ RAMJET PRIMER.
  20. ^ "A Century of Ramjet Propulsion Technology Evolution", AIAA Journal of Propulsion and Power, Vol. 20, No. 1, January – February 2004.
  21. ^ "Aérospatiale studies low-cost ramjet", Flight International, 13–19 December 1995.
  22. ^ "Hughes homes in on missile pact", Flight International, 11–17 September 1996.
  23. ^ Procinsky, I.M., McHale, C.A., "Nozzleless Boosters for Integral-Rocket-Ramjet Missile Systems, Paper 80-1277, AIAA/SAE/ASME 16th Joint Propulsion Conference, 30 June to 2 July 1980.
  24. ^ 11.6 Performance of Jet Engines.
  25. ^ "Boeing: History – Chronology 2002–2004" November 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  26. ^ "USAF vehicle breaks record for hypersonic flight" April 10, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.
  27. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  28. ^ PRELIMINARY SURVEY OF PROPULSION USING CHEMICAL ENERGY STORED IN THE UPPER ATMOSPHERE By Lionel V, Baldwin and Perry L. Blackshear.
  29. ^ Article title p. 18-1
  30. ^ Law, Peter (2013). SR-71 Propulsion System P&W J58 Engine (JT11D-20) (PDF). Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  31. ^ US 3344606, Robert B. Abernethy, "Recover Bleed Air Turbojet", published October 3, 1967 

[2] enginehistory org document about Lorin Ramjet

Bibliography

  • Hallion, Richard P. "The Soviet Stovepipes". Air Enthusiast, No. 9, February–May 1979, pp. 55–60. ISSN 0143-5450.

[3] enginehistory org document about Lorin Ramjet

External links

  • NASA ramjet information and model
  • "Riding The Ramjet" January 1949, Popular Mechanics article that covers the USAF first experiment with ramjets on a P-80 fighter
  • Design notes on a ramjet-powered helicopter
  • Extensive overview on ramjets and scramjets by French ONERA

ramjet, other, uses, disambiguation, ramjet, athodyd, aero, thermodynamic, duct, form, airbreathing, engine, that, uses, forward, motion, engine, produce, thrust, since, produces, thrust, when, stationary, ramjet, powered, vehicles, require, assisted, take, li. For other uses see Ramjet disambiguation A ramjet or athodyd aero thermodynamic duct is a form of airbreathing jet engine that uses the forward motion of the engine to produce thrust Since it produces no thrust when stationary no ram air ramjet powered vehicles require an assisted take off like a rocket assist to accelerate it to a speed where it begins to produce thrust Ramjets work most efficiently at supersonic speeds around Mach 3 2 300 mph 3 700 km h and can operate up to speeds of Mach 6 4 600 mph 7 400 km h Simple ramjet operation with Mach numbers of flow shown Ramjets can be particularly useful in applications requiring a small and simple mechanism for high speed use such as missiles The US Canada and UK had widespread ramjet powered missile defenses during the 1960s onward such as the CIM 10 Bomarc and Bloodhound Weapon designers are looking to use ramjet technology in artillery shells to give added range a 120 mm mortar shell if assisted by a ramjet is thought to be able to attain a range of 35 km 22 mi 1 They have also been used successfully though not efficiently as tip jets on the ends of helicopter rotors 2 Ramjets differ from pulsejets which use an intermittent combustion ramjets employ a continuous combustion process As speed increases the efficiency of a ramjet starts to drop as the air temperature in the inlet increases due to compression As the inlet temperature gets closer to the exhaust temperature less energy can be extracted in the form of thrust To produce a usable amount of thrust at yet higher speeds the ramjet must be modified so that the incoming air is not compressed and therefore heated nearly as much This means that the air flowing through the combustion chamber is still moving very fast relative to the engine in fact it will be supersonic hence the name supersonic combustion ramjet or scramjet Contents 1 History 1 1 Cyrano de Bergerac 1 2 Rene Lorin 1 3 Albert Fono 1 4 Soviet Union 1 5 Russia 1 6 Germany 1 7 United States 1 7 1 THOR ER 1 8 United Kingdom 1 8 1 Fritz Zwicky 1 9 France 2 Engine cycle 3 Design 4 Construction 4 1 Diffusers 4 2 Combustor 4 3 Nozzles 4 4 Performance and control 5 Control 6 Integral rocket ramjet ducted rocket 7 Flight speed 8 Related engines 8 1 Air turboramjet 8 2 Supersonic combustion ramjets scramjets 8 3 Standing oblique detonation ramjets Sodramjets 8 4 Precooled engines 8 5 Nuclear powered ramjet 8 6 Ionospheric ramjet 8 7 Bussard ramjet 8 8 Ramjet mode for an afterburning turbojet 9 Aircraft using ramjets 10 Missiles using ramjets 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory EditCyrano de Bergerac Edit L Autre Monde ou les Etats et Empires de la Lune Comical History of the States and Empires of the Moon 1657 was the first of three satirical novels written by Cyrano de Bergerac that are considered among the first science fiction stories Arthur C Clarke credited this book with conceiving of the ramjet 3 and being the first fictional example of a rocket powered space flight Rene Lorin Edit The ramjet was conceived in 1913 by French inventor Rene Lorin who was granted a patent for his device Attempts to build a prototype failed due to inadequate materials 4 His patent FR290356 showed a piston internal combustion engine with added trumpets as exhaust nozzles 1 Albert Fono Edit In 1915 Hungarian inventor Albert Fono devised a solution for increasing the range of artillery comprising a gun launched projectile which was to be united with a ramjet propulsion unit thus giving a long range from relatively low muzzle velocities allowing heavy shells to be fired from relatively lightweight guns Fono submitted his invention to the Austro Hungarian Army but the proposal was rejected 5 After World War I Fono returned to the subject of jet propulsion in May 1928 describing an air jet engine which he described as being suitable for high altitude supersonic aircraft in a German patent application In an additional patent application he adapted the engine for subsonic speed The patent was granted in 1932 after four years of examination German Patent No 554 906 1932 11 02 6 Soviet Union Edit In the Soviet Union a theory of supersonic ramjet engines was presented in 1928 by Boris Stechkin Yuri Pobedonostsev chief of GIRD s 3rd Brigade carried out a great deal of research into ramjet engines The first engine the GIRD 04 was designed by I A Merkulov and tested in April 1933 To simulate supersonic flight it was fed by air compressed to 20 000 kilopascals 200 atm and was fueled with hydrogen The GIRD 08 phosphorus fueled ramjet was tested by firing it from an artillery cannon These shells may have been the first jet powered projectiles to break the speed of sound In 1939 Merkulov did further ramjet tests using a two stage rocket the R 3 That August he developed the first ramjet engine for use as an auxiliary motor of an aircraft the DM 1 The world s first ramjet powered airplane flight took place in December 1940 using two DM 2 engines on a modified Polikarpov I 15 Merkulov designed a ramjet fighter Samolet D in 1941 which was never completed Two of his DM 4 engines were installed on the Yak 7 PVRD fighter during World War II In 1940 the Kostikov 302 experimental plane was designed powered by a liquid fuel rocket for take off and ramjet engines for flight That project was cancelled in 1944 In 1947 Mstislav Keldysh proposed a long range antipodal bomber similar to the Sanger Bredt bomber but powered by ramjet instead of rocket In 1954 NPO Lavochkin and the Keldysh Institute began development of a Mach 3 ramjet powered cruise missile Burya This project competed with the R 7 ICBM being developed by Sergei Korolev and was cancelled in 1957 Russia Edit On 1 March 2018 President Vladimir Putin announced Russia had developed a nuclear powered ramjet cruise missile capable of extended long range flight It has been designated 9M730 Burevestnik Petrel by Russia and has the NATO reporting name SSC X 9 Skyfall 7 On 9 August 2019 an explosion and release of radioactive material was recorded at the State Central Navy Testing Range Recovery efforts were underway to raise a test article which had landed in the White Sea during testing in 2018 when the nuclear power source of the missile detonated and killed 5 researchers 8 Germany Edit In 1936 Hellmuth Walter constructed a test engine powered by natural gas Theoretical work was carried out at BMW and Junkers as well as DFL In 1941 Eugen Sanger of DFL proposed a ramjet engine with a very high combustion chamber temperature He constructed very large ramjet pipes with 500 millimetres 20 in and 1 000 millimetres 39 in diameter and carried out combustion tests on lorries and on a special test rig on a Dornier Do 17Z at flight speeds of up to 200 metres per second 720 km h Later with petrol becoming scarce in Germany due to wartime conditions tests were carried out with blocks of pressed coal dust as a fuel see e g Lippisch P 13a which were not successful due to slow combustion 9 United States Edit An AQM 60 Kingfisher the first production ramjet to enter service with the US military Stovepipe flying flaming supersonic was a popular name for the ramjet during the 1950s in trade magazines such as Aviation Week amp Space Technology 10 and other publications such as The Cornell Engineer 11 and the Journal Of The American Rocket Society 12 The simplicity implied by the name came from a comparison with the turbojet engine which also has together with the inlet combustor and nozzle of a ramjet complex and expensive spinning turbomachinery compressor and turbine The US Navy developed a series of air to air missiles under the name of Gorgon using different propulsion mechanisms including ramjet propulsion on the Gorgon IV The ramjet Gorgon IVs made by Glenn Martin were tested in 1948 and 1949 at Naval Air Station Point Mugu The ramjet engine itself was designed at the University of Southern California and manufactured by the Marquardt Aircraft Company The engine was 2 1 metres 7 ft long and 510 millimetres 20 in in diameter and was positioned below the missile In the early 1950s the US developed a Mach 4 ramjet under the Lockheed X 7 program This was developed into the Lockheed AQM 60 Kingfisher Further development resulted in the Lockheed D 21 spy drone In the late 1950s the US Navy introduced a system called the RIM 8 Talos which was a long range surface to air missile fired from ships It successfully shot down several enemy fighters during the Vietnam war and was the first ship launched missile to destroy an enemy aircraft in combat On 23 May 1968 a Talos fired from USS Long Beach shot down a Vietnamese MiG at a range of about 105 kilometres 65 mi It was also used as a surface to surface weapon and was modified to destroy land based radars citation needed Using the technology proven by the AQM 60 In the late 1950s and early 1960s the US produced a widespread defense system called the CIM 10 Bomarc which was equipped with hundreds of nuclear armed ramjet missiles with a range of several hundred miles It was powered by the same engines as the AQM 60 but with improved materials to withstand the longer flight times The system was withdrawn in the 1970s as the threat from bombers was reduced THOR ER Edit In April 2020 the U S Department of Defense and the Norwegian Ministry of Defense jointly announced their partnership to develop advanced technologies applicable to long range high speed and hypersonic weapons The Tactical High speed Offensive Ramjet for Extended Range THOR ER program completed a solid fuel ramjet SFRJ vehicle test in August 2022 13 United Kingdom Edit A Bloodhound on display at the RAF Museum Hendon London In the late 1950s and early 1960s the UK developed several ramjet missiles A project called Blue Envoy was supposed to equip the country with a long range ramjet powered air defense against bombers but the system was eventually cancelled It was replaced by a much shorter range ramjet missile system called the Bloodhound The system was designed as a second line of defense in case attackers were able to bypass the fleet of defending English Electric Lightning fighters In the 1960s the Royal Navy developed and deployed a ramjet powered surface to air missile for ships called the Sea Dart It had a range of 65 130 kilometres 40 80 mi and a speed of Mach 3 It was used successfully in combat against multiple types of aircraft during the Falklands War Fritz Zwicky Edit Eminent Swiss astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky was research director at Aerojet and holds many patents in jet propulsion U S patents 5121670 and 4722261 are for ram accelerators The U S Navy would not allow Fritz Zwicky to publicly discuss his own invention U S Patent 2 461 797 for the Underwater Jet a ram jet that performs in a fluid medium Time magazine reported Fritz Zwicky s work in the articles Missed Swiss on 11 July 1955 14 and Underwater Jet in the 14 March 1949 issue 15 France Edit Leduc 010 In France the works of Rene Leduc were notable Leduc s Model the Leduc 0 10 was one of the first ramjet powered aircraft to fly in 1949 The Nord 1500 Griffon reached Mach 2 19 745 m s 2 680 km h in 1958 Engine cycle Edit Brayton cycle Main article Brayton cycle Air as it passes through a ramjet duct changes state eg changes in temperature pressure volume as it is compressed heated and expanded in a thermodynamic cycle known as the Brayton cycle This cycle also applies to the gas turbine engine For a fixed amount of air its change in state is represented with pairs of quantities on diagrams usually temperature entropy or pressure volume The cycle is named after George Brayton the American engineer who developed it although it was originally proposed and patented by Englishman John Barber in 1791 16 It is also sometimes known as the Joule cycle Design Edit A typical ramjet The first part of a ramjet is its diffuser compressor in which the forward motion of the ramjet is used to raise the pressure of its working fluid air as required for the combustion of fuel It is then passed through a nozzle to accelerate it to supersonic speeds This acceleration gives the ramjet forward thrust A ramjet is much less complex than a turbojet in so far as it comprises an air intake a combustor and a nozzle but no turbomachinery Normally the only moving parts are those in the fuel pump which sends the fuel to the spray nozzles in the combustor liquid fuel ramjet Solid fuel ramjets are simpler with no need for a fuel system By way of comparison a turbojet uses a compressor driven by a turbine This type of engine produces thrust when stationary because the high velocity air required to produce compressed air i e ram air in a ramjet is produced by the compressor itself fast spinning rotor blades Construction EditDiffusers Edit The diffuser is that part of the ramjet which converts the high velocity of the air approaching the intake into high static pressure required for combustion High combustion pressures minimize wasted thermal energy which appears in the exhaust gases 17 by reducing entropy rise during heat addition 18 Subsonic and low supersonic ramjets use a pitot type entrance for the inlet to capture air This is followed by a widening internal passage subsonic diffuser to achieve a lower subsonic velocity which is required at the combustor At low supersonic speeds a normal plane shock wave forms in front of the inlet For higher supersonic speeds the pressure loss through a normal shock wave in front of the inlet becomes prohibitive and a protruding spike or cone has to be used to produce oblique shock waves in front of a final normal shock which now occurs at the inlet entrance lip The diffuser in this case consists of two parts the supersonic diffuser with its shock waves external to the inlet followed by the internal subsonic diffuser At higher speeds still part of the supersonic diffusion has to take place internally so there are external and internal oblique shock waves The final normal shock has to occur in the vicinity of a minimum flow area known as the throat which is followed by the subsonic diffuser Combustor Edit As with other jet engines the combustor has to raise the temperature of the air by burning fuel This takes place with a small pressure loss The air velocity entering the combustor has to be low enough such that continuous combustion can take place in sheltered zones provided by flame holders Since there is no downstream turbine a ramjet combustor can safely operate at stoichiometric fuel air ratios which implies a combustor exit stagnation temperature of the order of 2 400 K 2 130 C 3 860 F for kerosene Normally the combustor must be capable of operating over a wide range of throttle settings for a range of flight speeds and altitudes Usually a sheltered pilot region enables combustion to continue when the vehicle intake undergoes high yaw pitch during turns Other flame stabilization techniques make use of flame holders which vary in design from combustor cans to simple flat plates to shelter the flame and improve fuel mixing Over fuelling the combustor can cause the final normal shock in the diffuser to be pushed forward beyond the intake lip resulting in a substantial drop in engine airflow and thrust Nozzles Edit The propelling nozzle is a critical part of a ramjet design since it accelerates exhaust flow to produce thrust Subsonic ramjets accelerate exhaust flow with a nozzle Supersonic flight typically requires a convergent divergent nozzle Bristol Thor ramjet modified for display purposes Two Thor engines were used on the Bristol Bloodhound missile Performance and control Edit Although ramjets have been run as slow as 45 metres per second 160 km h 19 below about Mach 0 5 170 m s 610 km h they give little thrust and are highly inefficient due to their low pressure ratios Above this speed given sufficient initial flight velocity a ramjet will be self sustaining Indeed unless the vehicle drag is extremely high the engine airframe combination will tend to accelerate to higher and higher flight speeds substantially increasing the air intake temperature As this could have a detrimental effect on the integrity of the engine and or airframe the fuel control system must reduce engine fuel flow to stabilize the flight Mach number and thereby air intake temperature to reasonable levels Due to the stoichiometric combustion temperature efficiency is usually good at high speeds around Mach 2 Mach 3 680 1 000 m s 2 500 3 700 km h whereas at low speeds the relatively poor pressure ratio means the ramjets are outperformed by turbojets or even rockets Control EditRamjets can be classified according to the type of fuel liquid or solid and the booster 20 In a liquid fuel ramjet LFRJ hydrocarbon fuel typically is injected into the combustor ahead of a flameholder which stabilises the flame resulting from the combustion of the fuel with the compressed air from the intake s A means of pressurizing and supplying the fuel to the ramcombustor is required which can be complicated and expensive Aerospatiale Celerg designed an LFRJ where the fuel is forced into the injectors by an elastomer bladder which inflates progressively along the length of the fuel tank Initially the bladder forms a close fitting sheath around the compressed air bottle from which it is inflated which is mounted lengthwise in the tank 21 This offers a lower cost approach than a regulated LFRJ requiring a turbopump and associated hardware to supply the fuel 22 A ramjet generates no static thrust and needs a booster to achieve a forward velocity high enough for efficient operation of the intake system The first ramjet powered missiles used external boosters usually solid propellant rockets either in tandem where the booster is mounted immediately aft of the ramjet e g Sea Dart or wraparound where multiple boosters are attached alongside the outside of the ramjet e g 2K11 Krug The choice of booster arrangement is usually driven by the size of the launch platform A tandem booster increases the overall length of the system whereas wraparound boosters increase the overall diameter Wraparound boosters will usually generate higher drag than a tandem arrangement Integrated boosters provide a more efficient packaging option since the booster propellant is cast inside the otherwise empty combustor This approach has been used on solid for example 2K12 Kub liquid for example ASMP and ducted rocket for example Meteor designs Integrated designs are complicated by the different nozzle requirements of the boost and ramjet phases of flight Due to the higher thrust levels of the booster a differently shaped nozzle is required for optimum thrust compared to that required for the lower thrust ramjet sustainer This is usually achieved via a separate nozzle which is ejected after booster burnout However designs such as Meteor feature nozzleless boosters This offers the advantages of elimination of the hazard to launch aircraft from the ejected boost nozzle debris simplicity reliability and reduced mass and cost 23 although this must be traded against the reduction in performance compared with that provided by a dedicated booster nozzle Integral rocket ramjet ducted rocket EditMain article Air augmented rocket A slight variation on the ramjet uses the supersonic exhaust from a rocket combustion process to compress and react with the incoming air in the main combustion chamber This has the advantage of giving thrust even at zero speed In a solid fuel integrated rocket ramjet SFIRR the solid fuel is cast along the outer wall of the ramcombustor In this case fuel injection is through ablation of the propellant by the hot compressed air from the intake s An aft mixer may be used to improve combustion efficiency SFIRRs are preferred over LFRJs for some applications because of the simplicity of the fuel supply but only when the throttling requirements are minimal i e when variations in altitude or Mach number are limited In a ducted rocket a solid fuel gas generator produces a hot fuel rich gas which is burnt in the ramcombustor with the compressed air supplied by the intake s The flow of gas improves the mixing of the fuel and air and increases total pressure recovery In a throttleable ducted rocket also known as a variable flow ducted rocket a valve allows the gas generator exhaust to be throttled allowing control of the thrust Unlike an LFRJ solid propellant ramjets cannot flame out The ducted rocket sits somewhere between the simplicity of the SFRJ and the unlimited throttleability of the LFRJ Flight speed EditRamjets generally give little or no thrust below about half the speed of sound and they are inefficient Specific Impulse of less than 600 seconds until the airspeed exceeds 1 000 kilometres per hour 280 m s 620 mph due to low compression ratios Even above the minimum speed a wide flight envelope range of flight conditions such as low to high speeds and low to high altitudes can force significant design compromises and they tend to work best optimised for one designed speed and altitude point designs However ramjets generally outperform gas turbine based jet engine designs and work best at supersonic speeds Mach 2 4 24 Although inefficient at slower speeds they are more fuel efficient than rockets over their entire useful working range up to at least Mach 6 2 000 m s 7 400 km h The performance of conventional ramjets falls off above Mach 6 due to dissociation and pressure loss caused by shock as the incoming air is slowed to subsonic velocities for combustion In addition the combustion chamber s inlet temperature increases to very high values approaching the dissociation limit at some limiting Mach number Related engines EditAir turboramjet Edit Main article Air turboramjet An air turboramjet has a compressor powered by a gas heated via a heat exchanger within the combustion chamber Supersonic combustion ramjets scramjets Edit Main article Scramjet Ramjet diffusers slow the incoming air to a subsonic velocity before it enters the combustor Scramjets are similar to ramjets but the air flows through the combustor at supersonic speed This increases the stagnation pressure recovered from the freestream and improves net thrust Thermal choking of the exhaust is avoided by having a relatively high supersonic air velocity at combustor entry Fuel injection is often into a sheltered region below a step in the combustor wall The Boeing X 43 was a small experimental ramjet 25 which achieved Mach 5 1 700 m s 6 100 km h for 200 seconds on the X 51A Waverider 26 Standing oblique detonation ramjets Sodramjets Edit Standing oblique detonation ramjets Sodramjets replace the diffusive ramjet combustion with an oblique detonation See also Shcramjet Criteria for hypersonic airbreathing propulsion and its experimental verification Oblique Detonation Wave Ramjet Precooled engines Edit Main article Precooled jet engine A variant of the pure ramjet is the combined cycle engine intended to overcome the limitations of the pure ramjet One example of this is the SABRE engine this uses a precooler behind which is the ramjet and turbine machinery The ATREX engine developed in Japan is an experimental implementation of this concept It uses liquid hydrogen fuel in a fairly exotic single fan arrangement The liquid hydrogen fuel is pumped through a heat exchanger in the air intake simultaneously heating the liquid hydrogen and cooling the incoming air This cooling of the incoming air is critical to achieving a reasonable efficiency The hydrogen then continues through a second heat exchanger position after the combustion section where the hot exhaust is used to further heat the hydrogen turning it into a very high pressure gas This gas is then passed through the tips of the fan to provide driving power to the fan at subsonic speeds After mixing with the air it is burned in the combustion chamber The Reaction Engines Scimitar has been proposed for the LAPCAT hypersonic airliner and the Reaction Engines SABRE for the Reaction Engines Skylon spaceplane Nuclear powered ramjet Edit Main article Project Pluto During the Cold War the United States designed and ground tested a nuclear powered ramjet called Project Pluto This system intended for use in a cruise missile used no combustion a high temperature unshielded nuclear reactor heated the air instead The ramjet was predicted to be able to fly at supersonic speeds for months Because the reactor was unshielded it was dangerous to anyone in or around the flight path of the low flying vehicle although the exhaust itself wasn t radioactive The project was ultimately cancelled because ICBMs seemed to serve the purpose better 27 Ionospheric ramjet Edit The upper atmosphere above about 100 kilometres 62 mi contains monatomic oxygen produced by the sun through photochemistry A concept was created by NASA for recombining this thin gas back to diatomic molecules at orbital speeds to power a ramjet 28 Bussard ramjet Edit Main article Bussard ramjet The Bussard ramjet is a spacecraft propulsion concept intended to fuse interstellar wind and exhaust it at high speed from the rear of the vehicle Ramjet mode for an afterburning turbojet Edit Main article Pratt amp Whitney J58 An afterburning turbojet or bypass engine can be described as transitioning from turbo to ramjet mode if it can attain a flight speed at which the engine pressure ratio epr has fallen to one The turbo afterburner then acts as a ramburner 29 The intake ram pressure is present at entry to the afterburner but is no longer augmented with a pressure rise from the turbomachinery Further increase in speed introduces a pressure loss due to the presence of the turbomachinery as the epr drops below one A notable example was the propulsion system for the Lockheed SR 71 Blackbird with an epr 0 9 at Mach 3 2 30 The thrust required airflow and exhaust temperature to reach this speed came from a standard method for increasing airflow through a compressor running at low corrected speeds compressor bleed and being able to increase the afterburner temperature as a result of cooling the duct and nozzle using the air taken from the compressor rather than the usual much hotter turbine exhaust gas 31 Aircraft using ramjets EditHiller Hornet a ramjet powered helicopter NHI H 3 Kolibrie helicopter Focke Wulf Super Lorin Focke Wulf Ta 283 Focke Wulf Triebflugel Leduc experimental aircraft Lockheed D 21 Lockheed X 7 1950 test vehicles AQM 60 Kingfisher X 7 derived target vehicles using Marquardt XRJ43 MA ramjet Nord 1500 Griffon Republic XF 103 design to use Wright J67 turbojet RJ55 W 1 ramjet never built Skoda Kauba Sk P 14Missiles using ramjets Edit2K11 Krug 2K12 Kub ASM 3 Bristol Bloodhound BrahMos CIM 10 Bomarc Orbital Sciences GQM 163 Coyote Hsiung Feng III Kh 31 MBDA ASMP MBDA Meteor P 270 Moskit P 800 Oniks Bendix RIM 8 Talos Sea Dart missile North American SM 64 Navaho Solid Fuel Ducted Ramjet YJ 12See also EditAircraft engine Jet aircraft Jet engine performance Liquid air cycle engine Turbofan TurbojetWikibooks Jet propulsionReferences Edit McNab Chris Keeter Hunter 2008 Death from a Distance Artillery Tools of Violence Guns Tanks and Dirty Bombs Oxford United Kingdom Osprey Publishing p 145 ISBN 978 1846032257 Retrieved 12 February 2016 Here Comes the Flying Stovepipe TIME Time Inc 26 November 1965 Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 8 April 2008 Liukkonen Petri Savien Cyrano de Bergerac Books and Writers kirjasto sci fi Finland Kuusankoski Public Library Archived from the original on 14 February 2015 Zucker Robert D Oscar Biblarz 2002 Fundamentals of gas dynamics John Wiley and Sons ISBN 0 471 05967 6 Gyorgy Nagy Istvan 1977 Albert Fono A Pioneer of Jet Propulsion PDF International Astronautical Congress IAF IAA Dugger Gordon L 1969 Ramjets American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics p 15 https twitter com nktpnd status 1064991343624237059 Twitter Retrieved 24 January 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Russian nuclear engineers buried after Skyfall nuclear blast www aljazeera com Retrieved 24 January 2023 Hirschel Ernst Heinrich Horst Prem Gero Madelung 2004 Aeronautical Research in Germany Springer pp 242 243 ISBN 3 540 40645 X https archive org details Aviation Week 1950 02 06 p 22 The Cornell Engineer 1951 03 Vol 16 Iss 6 Cornell University March 1951 https archive org details sim american rocket society ars journal 1949 12 79 p 163 Tactical High speed Offensive Ramjet for Extended Range THOR ER Team Completes Ramjet Ve Missed Swiss Time Inc 11 July 1955 Retrieved 27 August 2017 Underwater Jet Time Inc 14 March 1949 Retrieved 27 August 2017 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Gas Turbine Lab Web mit edu 27 August 1939 Retrieved 13 August 2012 https archive org details sim journal of aircraft 1976 04 13 4 mode 2up Propulsive Efficiency from an Energy Utilization Standpoint On The Thermodynamic Spectrum Of Airbreathing Propulsion page 2 Carl Builder AIAA 4 243 1st AIAA Annual meeting Washington DC June 1964 RAMJET PRIMER A Century of Ramjet Propulsion Technology Evolution AIAA Journal of Propulsion and Power Vol 20 No 1 January February 2004 Aerospatiale studies low cost ramjet Flight International 13 19 December 1995 Hughes homes in on missile pact Flight International 11 17 September 1996 Procinsky I M McHale C A Nozzleless Boosters for Integral Rocket Ramjet Missile Systems Paper 80 1277 AIAA SAE ASME 16th Joint Propulsion Conference 30 June to 2 July 1980 11 6 Performance of Jet Engines Boeing History Chronology 2002 2004 Archived November 14 2011 at the Wayback Machine USAF vehicle breaks record for hypersonic flight Archived April 10 2016 at the Wayback Machine Project Pluto Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 25 August 2015 PRELIMINARY SURVEY OF PROPULSION USING CHEMICAL ENERGY STORED IN THE UPPER ATMOSPHERE By Lionel V Baldwin and Perry L Blackshear Article title p 18 1 Law Peter 2013 SR 71 Propulsion System P amp W J58 Engine JT11D 20 PDF Retrieved 18 January 2020 US 3344606 Robert B Abernethy Recover Bleed Air Turbojet published October 3 1967 2 enginehistory org document about Lorin RamjetBibliography EditHallion Richard P The Soviet Stovepipes Air Enthusiast No 9 February May 1979 pp 55 60 ISSN 0143 5450 3 enginehistory org document about Lorin RamjetExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ramjets NASA ramjet information and model Riding The Ramjet January 1949 Popular Mechanics article that covers the USAF first experiment with ramjets on a P 80 fighter The Boeing Logbook 2002 2004 Design notes on a ramjet powered helicopter Extensive overview on ramjets and scramjets by French ONERA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ramjet amp oldid 1135582597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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