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Per altres autors anomenats Joseph R. Chambers, vegeu la pàgina de desambiguació.

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Crèdit de la imatge: NASA/David C. Bowman

Obres de Joseph R. Chambers

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Nom oficial
Chambers, Joseph R.
Gènere
male
Nacionalitat
USA
Organitzacions
NASA Langley Research Center
Biografia breu
Joseph R. Chambers is an aviation consultant who lives in Yorktown, VA. He retired from the NASA Langley Research Center in 1998, after a 36-year career as a researcher and manager of military and civil aeronautics research activities. He began his career as a specialist in flight dynamics as a member of the staff of the Langley Full-Scale Tunnel, where he conducted research on a variety of aerospace vehicles, including V/STOL configurations, reentry vehicles, and fighter aircraft configurations. He later became the manager of research projects in the Full-Scale Tunnel, the 20-Foot Spin Tunnel, flight research at Langley, and piloted simulators. When he retired from NASA, he was manager of a group responsible for conducting systems analysis of the potential payoffs of advanced aircraft concepts and NASA research investments. Mr. Chambers is the author of over 50 NASA technical reports and publications.

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Commonly called the “Mother Center,” the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, was the United States’ first civil aeronautical research laboratory. The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), NASA’s predecessor, created its first laboratory at Langley in 1917. In their book Radical Wings & Wind Tunnels, Joseph and Mark Chambers explore the history of the Langley test facilities and some of the aircraft tested there, focusing on two main areas: the wind tunnels and the aircraft that have gone through them.
Built in 1922, the first wind tunnel—the variable-density version—accurately tested subscale models. By the 1930s, Langley boasted five tunnels: the variable density, propeller (for component testing), spin, full scale, and free flight, all of them described in detail, including their dimensions and operating capabilities. The authors also provide diagrams of the wind tunnels and period photographs of aircraft such as the P-26 Peashooter and P-51 Mustang during their testing.
Numerous aircraft went through evaluation at the Langley facilities (both wind-tunnel and flight testing), a process that yielded various aerodynamic discoveries. This portion of the book examines early aeronautical developments (testing prior to 1958), support to spaceflight, extremely radical wing designs (reflected in the book’s title), and more recent military and civil testing. The testing of 27 early aircraft led to the development of aeronautical advances such as low-aspect wing-ratio airfoils, all-movable horizontal stabilizers, advanced flaps, aircraft cooling, more aerodynamic cowlings, and laminar-flow airfoils. With the transition of the NACA to NASA, manned space exploration became the organization’s primary interest, as was the case with the Langley facilities. Researchers explored such concepts as the parawing, for landing after a visit into space; lifting bodies; and the lunar lander training vehicle. The truly radical wings and aircraft included tilt and tilt-duct wings as well as vertical-take-off-and-landing and tail-sitter aircraft. The book concludes by addressing more recent research on the civil and military fronts, including thrust vectoring and sonic booming.
The authors fill Radical Wings & Wind Tunnels with photographs of wind tunnels, aircraft, and spacecraft. Despite its technical orientation, the text is accessible to aviators and non-aviators alike. Pilots, for example, will immediately recognize the numerous aeronautical advances produced by Langley’s research efforts, but readers with no flight experience will also find the book fascinating. One should note, however, that even though the book seeks to document the “more interesting radical aircraft concepts” tested at the Langley facilities, the authors’ discussion of sources is lacking, reflected by the absence of a bibliography. Nevertheless, Radical Wings & Wind Tunnels demonstrates that NASA is more than just spaceflight and space exploration. Clearly, we have the Langley test facilities to thank for many of the aviation concepts and innovations that we enjoy today.
… (més)
 
Marcat
LouisianaReader | Oct 9, 2016 |

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Obres
7
Membres
37
Popularitat
#390,572
Valoració
½ 3.3
Ressenyes
1
ISBN
11