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Lift-induced drag

Lift-induced drag, induced drag, vortex drag, or sometimes drag due to lift, in aerodynamics, is an aerodynamic drag force that occurs whenever a moving object redirects the airflow coming at it. This drag force occurs in airplanes due to wings or a lifting body redirecting air to cause lift and also in cars with airfoil wings that redirect air to cause a downforce. It is symbolized as , and the lift-induced drag coefficient as .

For a constant amount of lift, induced drag can be reduced by increasing airspeed. A counter-intuitive effect of this is that, up to the speed-for-minimum-drag, aircraft need less power to fly faster.[1] Induced drag is also reduced when the wingspan is higher,[2] or for wings with wingtip devices.

Explanation edit

 
Induced drag is related to the angle of the induced downwash in the vicinity of the wing. The grey vertical line labeled "L" is the force required to counteract the weight of the aircraft. The red vector labeled "Leff" is the actual lift on the wing; it is perpendicular to the effective relative airflow in the vicinity of the wing. The lift generated by the wing has been tilted rearwards through an angle equal to the downwash angle in three-dimensional flow. The component of "Leff" parallel to the free stream is the induced drag on the wing.[3][4]: Fig 5.24. [5][6]: 4.4

The total aerodynamic force acting on a body is usually thought of as having two components, lift and drag. By definition, the component of force parallel to the oncoming flow is called drag; and the component perpendicular to the oncoming flow is called lift.[7][4]: Section 5.3  At practical angles of attack the lift greatly exceeds the drag.[8]

Lift is produced by the changing direction of the flow around a wing. The change of direction results in a change of velocity (even if there is no speed change), which is an acceleration. To change the direction of the flow therefore requires that a force be applied to the fluid; the total aerodynamic force is simply the reaction force of the fluid acting on the wing.

An aircraft in slow flight at a high angle of attack will generate an aerodynamic reaction force with a high drag component. By increasing the speed and reducing the angle of attack, the lift generated can be held constant while the drag component is reduced. At the optimum angle of attack, total drag is minimised. If speed is increased beyond this, total drag will increase again due to increased profile drag.

Vortices edit

When producing lift, air below the wing is at a higher pressure than the air pressure above the wing. On a wing of finite span, this pressure difference causes air to flow from the lower surface, around the wingtip, towards the upper surface.[9]: 8.1.1  This spanwise flow of air combines with chordwise flowing air, which twists the airflow and produces vortices along the wing trailing edge. Induced drag is the cause of the vortices; the vortices do not cause induced drag.[6]: 4.6[6]: 4.7[9]: 8.1.4, 8.3, 8.4.1 

The vortices reduce the wing's ability to generate lift, so that it requires a higher angle of attack for the same lift, which tilts the total aerodynamic force rearwards and increases the drag component of that force. The angular deflection is small and has little effect on the lift. However, there is an increase in the drag equal to the product of the lift force and the angle through which it is deflected. Since the deflection is itself a function of the lift, the additional drag is proportional to the square of the lift.[4]: Section 5.17 

The vortices created are unstable,[clarification needed] and they quickly combine to produce wingtip vortices which trail behind the wingtip.[4]: Section 5.14 

Calculation of induced drag edit

For a planar wing with an elliptical lift distribution, induced drag Di can be calculated as follows:

 ,

where

  is the lift,
  is the standard density of air at sea level,
  is the equivalent airspeed,
  is the ratio of circumference to diameter of a circle, and
  is the wingspan.

From this equation it is clear that the induced drag varies with the square of the lift; and inversely with the square of the equivalent airspeed; and inversely with the square of the wingspan. Deviation from the non-planar wing with elliptical lift distribution are taken into account by dividing the induced drag by the span efficiency factor  .

To compare with other sources of drag, it can be convenient to express this equation in terms of lift and drag coefficients:[10]

 , where
 

and

  is the aspect ratio,
  is a reference wing area.

This indicates how, for a given wing area, high aspect ratio wings are beneficial to flight efficiency. With   being a function of angle of attack, induced drag increases as the angle of attack increases.[4]: Section 5.17 

The above equation can be derived using Prandtl's lifting-line theory.[citation needed] Similar methods can also be used to compute the minimum induced drag for non-planar wings or for arbitrary lift distributions.[citation needed]

Reducing induced drag edit

According to the equations above, for wings generating the same lift, the induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of the wingspan. A wing of infinite span and uniform airfoil segment (or a 2D wing) would experience no induced drag.[11] The drag characteristics of a wing with infinite span can be simulated using an airfoil segment the width of a wind tunnel.[12]

An increase in wingspan or a solution with a similar effect is one way to reduce induced drag.[6]: 4.10 The Wright brothers used curved trailing edges on their rectangular wings.[13] Some early aircraft had fins mounted on the tips. More recent aircraft have wingtip-mounted winglets to reduce the induced drag.[14] Winglets also provide some benefit by increasing the vertical height of the wing system.[6]: 4.10 Wingtip mounted fuel tanks and wing washout may also provide some benefit.[citation needed]

Typically, the elliptical spanwise distribution of lift produces the minimum induced drag[15] for a planar wing of a given span. A small number of aircraft have a planform approaching the elliptical — the most famous examples being the World War II Spitfire[13] and Thunderbolt. For modern wings with winglets, the ideal lift distribution is not elliptical.[6]: 4.9

For a given wing area, a high aspect ratio wing will produce less induced drag than a wing of low aspect ratio.[16] While induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of the wingspan, not necessarily inversely proportional to aspect ratio, if the wing area is held constant, then induced drag will be inversely proportional to aspect ratio. However, since wingspan can be increased while decreasing aspect ratio, or vice versa, the apparent relationship between aspect ratio and induced drag does not always hold.[2][9]: 489 

For a typical twin-engine wide-body aircraft at cruise speed, induced drag is the second-largest component of total drag, accounting for approximately 37% of total drag. Skin friction drag is the largest component of total drag, at almost 48%.[17][18][19]: 20  Reducing induced drag can therefore significantly reduce cost and environmental impact.[19]: 18 

Combined effect with other drag sources edit

 
Total drag is parasitic drag plus induced drag

In 1891, Samuel Langley published the results of his experiments on various flat plates. At the same airspeed and the same angle of attack, plates with higher aspect ratio produced greater lift and experienced lower drag than those with lower aspect ratio.[1]

His experiments were carried out at relatively low airspeeds, slower than the speed for minimum drag.[20] He observed that, at these low airspeeds, increasing speed required reducing power.[21] (At higher airspeeds, parasitic drag came to dominate, causing the power required to increase with increasing airspeed.)

Induced drag must be added to the parasitic drag to find the total drag. Since induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of the airspeed (at a given lift) whereas parasitic drag is proportional to the square of the airspeed, the combined overall drag curve shows a minimum at some airspeed - the minimum drag speed (VMD). An aircraft flying at this speed is operating at its optimal aerodynamic efficiency. According to the above equations, the speed for minimum drag occurs at the speed where the induced drag is equal to the parasitic drag.[4]: Section 5.25  This is the speed at which for unpowered aircraft, optimum glide angle is achieved. This is also the speed for greatest range (although VMD will decrease as the plane consumes fuel and becomes lighter). The speed for greatest range (i.e. distance travelled) is the speed at which a straight line from the origin is tangent to the fuel flow rate curve.

The curve of range versus airspeed is normally very shallow and it is customary to operate at the speed for 99% best range since this gives 3-5% greater speed for only 1% less range. Flying higher where the air is thinner will raise the speed at which minimum drag occurs, and so permits a faster voyage for the same amount of fuel. If the plane is flying at the maximum permissible speed, then there is an altitude at which the air density will be sufficient to keep it aloft while flying at the angle of attack that minimizes the drag. The optimum altitude will increase during the flight as the plane becomes lighter.

The speed for maximum endurance (i.e. time in the air) is the speed for minimum fuel flow rate, and is always less than the speed for greatest range. The fuel flow rate is calculated as the product of the power required and the engine specific fuel consumption (fuel flow rate per unit of power[a]). The power required is equal to the drag times the speed.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The engine specific fuel consumption is normally expressed in units of fuel flow rate per unit of thrust or per unit of power depending on whether the engine output is measured in thrust, as for a jet engine, or shaft horsepower, as for a propeller engine. To convert fuel rate per unit thrust to fuel rate per unit power one must divide by the speed.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bjorn Fehrm (Nov 3, 2017). "Bjorn's Corner: Aircraft drag reduction, Part 3". Leeham.
  2. ^ a b Illsley, Michael (4 July 2017). "Why Aspect Ratio doesn't Matter – Understanding Aerospace". Understanding Aerospace. Retrieved 25 March 2022.
  3. ^ Hurt, H. H. (1965) Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators, Figure 1.30, NAVWEPS 00-80T-80
  4. ^ a b c d e f Clancy, L.J. (1975) Aerodynamics. Pitman Publishing Limited, London. ISBN 0-273-01120-0
  5. ^ Kermode, A.C. (1972). Mechanics of Flight, Figure 3.29, Ninth edition. Longman Scientific & Technical, England. ISBN 0-582-42254-X
  6. ^ a b c d e f McLean, Doug (2005). Wingtip Devices: What They Do and How They Do It (PDF). 2005 Boeing Performance and Flight Operations Engineering Conference.
  7. ^ Anderson, John D. Jr. (2017). Fundamentals of aerodynamics (Sixth ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Education. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-259-12991-9.
  8. ^ Abbott, Ira H., and Von Doenhoff, Albert E., Theory of Wing Sections, Section 1.2 and Appendix IV
  9. ^ a b c McLean, Doug (2012). Understanding Aerodynamics: Arguing from the Real Physics. ISBN 978-1119967514.
  10. ^ Anderson, John D. (2005), Introduction to Flight, McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-123818-2. p318
  11. ^ Houghton, E. L. (2012). "1.6". Aerodynamics for engineering students (Sixth ed.). Waltham, MA. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-08-096632-8. For a two-dimensional wing at low Mach numbers, the drag contains no induced or wave drag{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ Molland, Anthony F. (2007). "Physics of control surface operation". Marine rudders and control surfaces : principles, data, design and applications (1st ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier/Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 41. ISBN 9780750669443. With infinite span, fluid motion is 2-D and in the direction of flow perpendicular to the span. Infinite span can, for example, be simulated using a foil completely spanning a wind tunnel.
  13. ^ a b "Induced Drag Coefficient". www.grc.nasa.gov. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  14. ^ Richard T. Whitcomb (July 1976). A design approach and selected wind-tunnel results at high subsonic speeds for wing-tip mounted winglets (PDF) (Technical report). NASA. 19760019075. p. 1: Winglets, which are small, nearly vertical, winglike surfaces mounted at the tips of a wing, are intended to provide, for lifting conditions and subsonic Mach numbers, reductions in drag coefficient greater than those achieved by a simple wing-tip extension with the same structural weight penalty.{{cite tech report}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  15. ^ Glauert, H. The Elements of Aerofoil and Airscrew Theory (1926); referenced in Fig. 5.4 of Airplane Aerodynamics by Daniel O. Dommasch, Sydney S. Sherby, Thomas F. Connolly, 3rd ed. (1961)
  16. ^ "Skybrary: Induced Drag". Retrieved 5 May 2015.
  17. ^ Robert, JP (March 1992). Cousteix, J (ed.). "Drag reduction: an industrial challenge". Special Course on Skin Friction Drag Reduction. AGARD Report 786. AGARD: 2-13.
  18. ^ Coustols, Eric (1996). Meier, GEA; Schnerr, GH (eds.). "Control of Turbulent Flows for Skin Friction Drag Reduction". Control of Flow Instabilities and Unsteady Flows: 156. ISBN 9783709126882. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  19. ^ a b Marec, J.-P. (2001). "Drag Reduction: A Major Task for Research". In Peter Thiede (ed.). Aerodynamic Drag Reduction Technologies. Springer. pp. 17–27. Bibcode:2001adrt.conf...17M. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-45359-8_3. ISBN 978-3-642-07541-4. ISSN 0179-9614. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  20. ^ Hallion, Richard (8 May 2003). Taking Flight: Inventing the Aerial Age, from Antiquity Through the First World War. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-19-516035-2. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
  21. ^ Hansen, James R. (2004). The Bird Is on the Wing: Aerodynamics and the Progress of the American Airplane. College Station: Texas A&M University Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-58544-243-0. Retrieved 13 April 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • L. J. Clancy (1975), Aerodynamics, Pitman Publishing Limited, London. ISBN 0-273-01120-0
  • Abbott, Ira H., and Von Doenhoff, Albert E. (1959), Theory of Wing Sections, Dover Publications, Standard Book Number 486-60586-8
  • Luciano Demasi, Antonio Dipace, Giovanni Monegato, and Rauno Cavallaro. Invariant Formulation for the Minimum Induced Drag Conditions of Nonplanar Wing Systems, AIAA Journal, Vol. 52, No. 10 (2014), pp. 2223–2240. doi: 10.2514/1.J052837

External links edit

  • Doug McLean, Common Misconceptions in Aerodynamics on YouTube

lift, induced, drag, induced, drag, vortex, drag, sometimes, drag, lift, aerodynamics, aerodynamic, drag, force, that, occurs, whenever, moving, object, redirects, airflow, coming, this, drag, force, occurs, airplanes, wings, lifting, body, redirecting, cause,. Lift induced drag induced drag vortex drag or sometimes drag due to lift in aerodynamics is an aerodynamic drag force that occurs whenever a moving object redirects the airflow coming at it This drag force occurs in airplanes due to wings or a lifting body redirecting air to cause lift and also in cars with airfoil wings that redirect air to cause a downforce It is symbolized as D i textstyle D text i and the lift induced drag coefficient as C D i textstyle C D i For a constant amount of lift induced drag can be reduced by increasing airspeed A counter intuitive effect of this is that up to the speed for minimum drag aircraft need less power to fly faster 1 Induced drag is also reduced when the wingspan is higher 2 or for wings with wingtip devices Contents 1 Explanation 2 Vortices 3 Calculation of induced drag 4 Reducing induced drag 5 Combined effect with other drag sources 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksExplanation edit nbsp Induced drag is related to the angle of the induced downwash in the vicinity of the wing The grey vertical line labeled L is the force required to counteract the weight of the aircraft The red vector labeled Leff is the actual lift on the wing it is perpendicular to the effective relative airflow in the vicinity of the wing The lift generated by the wing has been tilted rearwards through an angle equal to the downwash angle in three dimensional flow The component of Leff parallel to the free stream is the induced drag on the wing 3 4 Fig 5 24 5 6 4 4 The total aerodynamic force acting on a body is usually thought of as having two components lift and drag By definition the component of force parallel to the oncoming flow is called drag and the component perpendicular to the oncoming flow is called lift 7 4 Section 5 3 At practical angles of attack the lift greatly exceeds the drag 8 Lift is produced by the changing direction of the flow around a wing The change of direction results in a change of velocity even if there is no speed change which is an acceleration To change the direction of the flow therefore requires that a force be applied to the fluid the total aerodynamic force is simply the reaction force of the fluid acting on the wing An aircraft in slow flight at a high angle of attack will generate an aerodynamic reaction force with a high drag component By increasing the speed and reducing the angle of attack the lift generated can be held constant while the drag component is reduced At the optimum angle of attack total drag is minimised If speed is increased beyond this total drag will increase again due to increased profile drag Vortices editWhen producing lift air below the wing is at a higher pressure than the air pressure above the wing On a wing of finite span this pressure difference causes air to flow from the lower surface around the wingtip towards the upper surface 9 8 1 1 This spanwise flow of air combines with chordwise flowing air which twists the airflow and produces vortices along the wing trailing edge Induced drag is the cause of the vortices the vortices do not cause induced drag 6 4 6 6 4 7 9 8 1 4 8 3 8 4 1 The vortices reduce the wing s ability to generate lift so that it requires a higher angle of attack for the same lift which tilts the total aerodynamic force rearwards and increases the drag component of that force The angular deflection is small and has little effect on the lift However there is an increase in the drag equal to the product of the lift force and the angle through which it is deflected Since the deflection is itself a function of the lift the additional drag is proportional to the square of the lift 4 Section 5 17 The vortices created are unstable clarification needed and they quickly combine to produce wingtip vortices which trail behind the wingtip 4 Section 5 14 Calculation of induced drag editFor a planar wing with an elliptical lift distribution induced drag Di can be calculated as follows D i L 2 1 2 r 0 V E 2 p b 2 displaystyle D text i frac L 2 frac 1 2 rho 0 V E 2 pi b 2 nbsp where L displaystyle L nbsp is the lift r 0 displaystyle rho 0 nbsp is the standard density of air at sea level V E displaystyle V E nbsp is the equivalent airspeed p displaystyle pi nbsp is the ratio of circumference to diameter of a circle and b displaystyle b nbsp is the wingspan From this equation it is clear that the induced drag varies with the square of the lift and inversely with the square of the equivalent airspeed and inversely with the square of the wingspan Deviation from the non planar wing with elliptical lift distribution are taken into account by dividing the induced drag by the span efficiency factor e displaystyle e nbsp To compare with other sources of drag it can be convenient to express this equation in terms of lift and drag coefficients 10 C D i D i 1 2 r 0 V E 2 S C L 2 p A R e displaystyle C D i frac D text i frac 1 2 rho 0 V E 2 S frac C L 2 pi A text R e nbsp where C L L 1 2 r 0 V E 2 S displaystyle C L frac L frac 1 2 rho 0 V E 2 S nbsp and A R b 2 S displaystyle A text R frac b 2 S nbsp is the aspect ratio S displaystyle S nbsp is a reference wing area This indicates how for a given wing area high aspect ratio wings are beneficial to flight efficiency With C L displaystyle C L nbsp being a function of angle of attack induced drag increases as the angle of attack increases 4 Section 5 17 The above equation can be derived using Prandtl s lifting line theory citation needed Similar methods can also be used to compute the minimum induced drag for non planar wings or for arbitrary lift distributions citation needed Reducing induced drag editAccording to the equations above for wings generating the same lift the induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of the wingspan A wing of infinite span and uniform airfoil segment or a 2D wing would experience no induced drag 11 The drag characteristics of a wing with infinite span can be simulated using an airfoil segment the width of a wind tunnel 12 An increase in wingspan or a solution with a similar effect is one way to reduce induced drag 6 4 10 The Wright brothers used curved trailing edges on their rectangular wings 13 Some early aircraft had fins mounted on the tips More recent aircraft have wingtip mounted winglets to reduce the induced drag 14 Winglets also provide some benefit by increasing the vertical height of the wing system 6 4 10 Wingtip mounted fuel tanks and wing washout may also provide some benefit citation needed Typically the elliptical spanwise distribution of lift produces the minimum induced drag 15 for a planar wing of a given span A small number of aircraft have a planform approaching the elliptical the most famous examples being the World War II Spitfire 13 and Thunderbolt For modern wings with winglets the ideal lift distribution is not elliptical 6 4 9 For a given wing area a high aspect ratio wing will produce less induced drag than a wing of low aspect ratio 16 While induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of the wingspan not necessarily inversely proportional to aspect ratio if the wing area is held constant then induced drag will be inversely proportional to aspect ratio However since wingspan can be increased while decreasing aspect ratio or vice versa the apparent relationship between aspect ratio and induced drag does not always hold 2 9 489 For a typical twin engine wide body aircraft at cruise speed induced drag is the second largest component of total drag accounting for approximately 37 of total drag Skin friction drag is the largest component of total drag at almost 48 17 18 19 20 Reducing induced drag can therefore significantly reduce cost and environmental impact 19 18 Combined effect with other drag sources edit nbsp Total drag is parasitic drag plus induced drag In 1891 Samuel Langley published the results of his experiments on various flat plates At the same airspeed and the same angle of attack plates with higher aspect ratio produced greater lift and experienced lower drag than those with lower aspect ratio 1 His experiments were carried out at relatively low airspeeds slower than the speed for minimum drag 20 He observed that at these low airspeeds increasing speed required reducing power 21 At higher airspeeds parasitic drag came to dominate causing the power required to increase with increasing airspeed Induced drag must be added to the parasitic drag to find the total drag Since induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of the airspeed at a given lift whereas parasitic drag is proportional to the square of the airspeed the combined overall drag curve shows a minimum at some airspeed the minimum drag speed VMD An aircraft flying at this speed is operating at its optimal aerodynamic efficiency According to the above equations the speed for minimum drag occurs at the speed where the induced drag is equal to the parasitic drag 4 Section 5 25 This is the speed at which for unpowered aircraft optimum glide angle is achieved This is also the speed for greatest range although VMD will decrease as the plane consumes fuel and becomes lighter The speed for greatest range i e distance travelled is the speed at which a straight line from the origin is tangent to the fuel flow rate curve The curve of range versus airspeed is normally very shallow and it is customary to operate at the speed for 99 best range since this gives 3 5 greater speed for only 1 less range Flying higher where the air is thinner will raise the speed at which minimum drag occurs and so permits a faster voyage for the same amount of fuel If the plane is flying at the maximum permissible speed then there is an altitude at which the air density will be sufficient to keep it aloft while flying at the angle of attack that minimizes the drag The optimum altitude will increase during the flight as the plane becomes lighter The speed for maximum endurance i e time in the air is the speed for minimum fuel flow rate and is always less than the speed for greatest range The fuel flow rate is calculated as the product of the power required and the engine specific fuel consumption fuel flow rate per unit of power a The power required is equal to the drag times the speed See also editAerodynamic force Drag Oswald efficiency number Parasitic drag Wave drag Wingtip vorticesNotes edit The engine specific fuel consumption is normally expressed in units of fuel flow rate per unit of thrust or per unit of power depending on whether the engine output is measured in thrust as for a jet engine or shaft horsepower as for a propeller engine To convert fuel rate per unit thrust to fuel rate per unit power one must divide by the speed References edit a b Bjorn Fehrm Nov 3 2017 Bjorn s Corner Aircraft drag reduction Part 3 Leeham a b Illsley Michael 4 July 2017 Why Aspect Ratio doesn t Matter Understanding Aerospace Understanding Aerospace Retrieved 25 March 2022 Hurt H H 1965 Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators Figure 1 30 NAVWEPS 00 80T 80 a b c d e f Clancy L J 1975 Aerodynamics Pitman Publishing Limited London ISBN 0 273 01120 0 Kermode A C 1972 Mechanics of Flight Figure 3 29 Ninth edition Longman Scientific amp Technical England ISBN 0 582 42254 X a b c d e f McLean Doug 2005 Wingtip Devices What They Do and How They Do It PDF 2005 Boeing Performance and Flight Operations Engineering Conference Anderson John D Jr 2017 Fundamentals of aerodynamics Sixth ed New York NY McGraw Hill Education p 20 ISBN 978 1 259 12991 9 Abbott Ira H and Von Doenhoff Albert E Theory of Wing Sections Section 1 2 and Appendix IV a b c McLean Doug 2012 Understanding Aerodynamics Arguing from the Real Physics ISBN 978 1119967514 Anderson John D 2005 Introduction to Flight McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 123818 2 p318 Houghton E L 2012 1 6 Aerodynamics for engineering students Sixth ed Waltham MA p 61 ISBN 978 0 08 096632 8 For a two dimensional wing at low Mach numbers the drag contains no induced or wave drag a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Molland Anthony F 2007 Physics of control surface operation Marine rudders and control surfaces principles data design and applications 1st ed Amsterdam Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann p 41 ISBN 9780750669443 With infinite span fluid motion is 2 D and in the direction of flow perpendicular to the span Infinite span can for example be simulated using a foil completely spanning a wind tunnel a b Induced Drag Coefficient www grc nasa gov Retrieved 9 February 2023 Richard T Whitcomb July 1976 A design approach and selected wind tunnel results at high subsonic speeds for wing tip mounted winglets PDF Technical report NASA 19760019075 p 1 Winglets which are small nearly vertical winglike surfaces mounted at the tips of a wing are intended to provide for lifting conditions and subsonic Mach numbers reductions in drag coefficient greater than those achieved by a simple wing tip extension with the same structural weight penalty a href Template Cite tech report html title Template Cite tech report cite tech report a CS1 maint date and year link Glauert H The Elements of Aerofoil and Airscrew Theory 1926 referenced in Fig 5 4 of Airplane Aerodynamics by Daniel O Dommasch Sydney S Sherby Thomas F Connolly 3rd ed 1961 Skybrary Induced Drag Retrieved 5 May 2015 Robert JP March 1992 Cousteix J ed Drag reduction an industrial challenge Special Course on Skin Friction Drag Reduction AGARD Report 786 AGARD 2 13 Coustols Eric 1996 Meier GEA Schnerr GH eds Control of Turbulent Flows for Skin Friction Drag Reduction Control of Flow Instabilities and Unsteady Flows 156 ISBN 9783709126882 Retrieved 24 March 2022 a b Marec J P 2001 Drag Reduction A Major Task for Research In Peter Thiede ed Aerodynamic Drag Reduction Technologies Springer pp 17 27 Bibcode 2001adrt conf 17M doi 10 1007 978 3 540 45359 8 3 ISBN 978 3 642 07541 4 ISSN 0179 9614 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Hallion Richard 8 May 2003 Taking Flight Inventing the Aerial Age from Antiquity Through the First World War Oxford University Press USA p 147 ISBN 978 0 19 516035 2 Retrieved 13 April 2022 Hansen James R 2004 The Bird Is on the Wing Aerodynamics and the Progress of the American Airplane College Station Texas A amp M University Press p 23 ISBN 978 1 58544 243 0 Retrieved 13 April 2022 Bibliography editL J Clancy 1975 Aerodynamics Pitman Publishing Limited London ISBN 0 273 01120 0 Abbott Ira H and Von Doenhoff Albert E 1959 Theory of Wing Sections Dover Publications Standard Book Number 486 60586 8 Luciano Demasi Antonio Dipace Giovanni Monegato and Rauno Cavallaro Invariant Formulation for the Minimum Induced Drag Conditions of Nonplanar Wing Systems AIAA Journal Vol 52 No 10 2014 pp 2223 2240 doi 10 2514 1 J052837External links editDoug McLean Common Misconceptions in Aerodynamics on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lift induced drag amp oldid 1212192308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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