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result(s) for
"Helicopters Handling characteristics."
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Helicopter flight dynamics : including a treatment of tiltrotor aircraft
\"Sales handles - Significantly updated new edition with two new chapters covering flight dynamics of tilt rotor aircraft and the historical developments of rotorcraft HQs - Provides a comprehensive treatment of helicopter flight dynamics, covering the theoretical background to the dynamics of helicopter flight, the development of handling criteria and new flight test techniques - Covers the theory and application of flying qualities and simulation modelling - Includes case studies and recent applications Market description (Please include secondary markets) Tier 5/ P&R Primary: Aerospace engineers. Secondary: Graduate and senior undergraduate students in aerospace engineering, government.\" -- Provided by publisher.
Helicopter flight dynamics : including a treatment of tiltrotor aircraft
by
Padfield, G. D.
in
Helicopters
,
Helicopters -- Aerodynamics
,
Helicopters -- Handling characteristics
2018
The Book The behaviour of helicopters and tiltrotor aircraft is so complex that understanding the physical mechanisms at work in trim, stability and response, and thus the prediction of Flying Qualities, requires a framework of analytical and numerical modelling and simulation.
Helicopter Flight Dynamics
2007,2008
The behaviour of helicopters is so complex that understanding the physical mechanisms at work in trim, stability and response, and thus the prediction of Flying Qualities, requires a framework of analytical and numerical modelling and simulation. Good Flying Qualities are vital for ensuring that mission performance is achievable with safety and, in the first edition of Helicopter Flight Dynamics, a comprehensive treatment of design criteria was presented. In this second edition, the author complements this with a new Chapter on Degraded Flying Qualities, drawing examples from flight in poor visibility, failure of control functions and encounters with severe atmospheric disturbances. Fully embracing the consequences of Degraded Flying Qualities during the design phase will contribute positively to safety. The accurate prediction and assessment of Flying Qualities draws on the modelling and simulation discipline on the one hand and testing methodologies on the other. Checking predictions in flight requires clearly defined 'mission-task-elements', derived from missions with realistic performance requirements. High fidelity simulations also form the basis for the design of stability and control augmentation systems, essential for conferring Level 1 Flying Qualities. The integrated description of flight dynamic modelling, simulation and flying qualities forms the subject of this book, which will be of interest to engineers in research laboratories and manufacturing industry, test pilots and flight test engineers, and as a reference for graduate and postgraduate students in aerospace engineering. The Author Gareth Padfield, a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society, is the Bibby Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Liverpool. He is an aeronautical engineer by training and has spent his career to date researching the theory and
practice of flight for both fixed-wing aeroplanes and rotorcraft. During his years with the UK's Royal Aircraft Establishment and Defence Evaluation and Research Agency, he conducted research into rotorcraft dynamics, handling qualities and flight control. His work has involved a mix of flight testing, creating and testing simulation models and developing analytic approximations to describe flight behaviour and handling qualities. Much of his research has been conducted in the context of international collaboration - with the Technical Co-operation Programme, AGARD and GARTEUR as well as more informal collaborations with industry, universities and research centres worldwide. He is very aware that many accomplishments, including this book, could not have been achieved without the global networking that aerospace research affords. During the last 8 years as an academic, the author has continued to develop his knowledge and understanding in flight dynamics, not only through research, but also through teaching the subject at undergraduate level; an experience that affords a new and deeper kind of learning that, hopefully, readers of this book will benefit from.
Influence of Engine Dynamic Characteristics on Helicopter Handling Quality in Hover and Low-Speed Forward Flight
2024
This study assesses the influence of engine dynamic characteristics on helicopter handling quality during hover and low-speed forward flight. First, we construct the helicopter–engine coupling model (HECM) based on the power-matching relationship between the engine and the rotor. The impact of the engine is evaluated by comparing HECM with a helicopter model without the engine. To assess the engine’s influence quantitatively, we consider torque response, height response, and collective–yaw coupling characteristics in ADS-33E-PRF handling quality criteria. The results reveal that the engine power output lag can deteriorate the helicopter’s torque and height response handling quality rate (HQR). After the increase in helicopter mass, the torque HQR caused by engine influence improved, and the altitude HQR further deteriorated. The engine dynamic characteristics can also reverse the yaw rate, decreasing collective–yaw coupling HQR. As the helicopter’s flight speed increased, the engine’s impact on the yaw rate increased by 41.8%. This study can provide valuable insight into the effects of engine dynamic characteristics on helicopter handling quality and offer a reference for the design of helicopter–engine coupling control laws.
Journal Article
Examining the stability derivatives of a compound helicopter
2017
Some helicopter manufacturers are exploring the compound helicopter design as it could potentially satisfy the new emerging requirements placed on the next generation of rotorcraft. It is well understood that the main benefit of the compound helicopter is its ability to reach speeds that significantly surpass the conventional helicopter. However, it is possible that the introduction of compounding may lead to a vehicle with significantly different flight characteristics when compared to a conventional helicopter. One method to examine the flight dynamics of an aircraft is to create a linearised mathematical model of the aircraft and to investigate the stability derivatives of the vehicle. The aim of this paper is to examine the stability derivatives of a compound helicopter through a comparison with a conventional helicopter. By taking this approach, some stability, handling qualities and design issues associated with the compound helicopter can be identified. The paper features a conventional helicopter and a compound helicopter. The conventional helicopter is a standard design, featuring a main rotor and a tail-rotor. The compound helicopter configuration features both lift and thrust compounding. The wing offloads the main rotor at high speeds, whereas two propellers provide additional propulsive thrust as well as yaw control. The results highlight that the bare airframe compound helicopter would require a larger tailplane surface to ensure acceptable longitudinal handling qualities in forward flight. In addition, without increasing the size of the bare airframe compound helicopter’s vertical fin, the Dutch roll mode satisfies the ADS-33 level 1 handling qualities category for the majority of the flight envelope.
Journal Article
'Hate crime' and the city
2008,2009
The impression often conveyed by the media about hate crime offenders is that they are hate-fuelled individuals who, in acting out their extremely bigoted views, target their victims in premeditated violent attacks. Scholarly research on the perpetrators of hate crime has begun to provide a more nuanced picture. But the preoccupation of researchers with convicted offenders neglects the vast majority of hate crime offenders that do not come into contact with the criminal justice system. This book, from a leading author in the field, widens understanding of hate crime by demonstrating that many offenders are ordinary people who offend in the context of their everyday lives. Written in a lively and accessible style, the book takes a victim-centred approach to explore and analyse hate crime as a social problem, providing an empirically informed and scholarly perspective. Aimed at academics and students of criminology, sociology and socio-legal studies, the book draws out the connections between the individual agency of offenders and the background structural context for their actions. It adds a new dimension to the debate about criminalising hate in light of concerns about the rise of punitive and expressive justice, scrutinizing the balance struck by hate crime laws between the rights of offenders and the rights of victims.