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Aircraft Design
Aircraft Design is a textbook, based on real industrial practice, for students, postgraduates, and professionals studying aircraft systems design.
Ajoy Kumar Kundu (Author)
9780521885164, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 12 April 2010
648 pages, 368 b/w illus. 125 tables 88 exercises
26 x 18.4 x 3 cm, 1.24 kg
Aircraft Design explores fixed winged aircraft design at the conceptual phase of a project. Designing an aircraft is a complex multifaceted process embracing many technical challenges in a multidisciplinary environment. By definition, the topic requires intelligent use of aerodynamic knowledge to configure aircraft geometry suited specifically to the customer's demands. It involves estimating aircraft weight and drag and computing the available thrust from the engine. The methodology shown here includes formal sizing of the aircraft, engine matching, and substantiating performance to comply with the customer's demands and government regulatory standards. Associated topics include safety issues, environmental issues, material choice, structural layout, understanding flight deck, avionics, and systems (for both civilian and military aircraft). Cost estimation and manufacturing considerations are also discussed. The chapters are arranged to optimize understanding of industrial approaches to aircraft design methodology. Example exercises from the author's industrial experience dealing with a typical aircraft design are included.
1. Introduction
2. Methodology to aircraft design, market survey and airworthiness
3. Aerodynamic considerations
4. Classification, statistics and choices for configuration
5. Aircraft load
6. Aircraft configuration
7. Undercarriage
8. Aircraft weight and CG estimation
9. Drag
10. Aircraft power plant
11. Aircraft sizing and engine matching
12. Stability consideration
13. Aircraft performance
14. Computational fluid dynamics
15. Miscellaneous design considerations
16. Aircraft cost considerations
17. Aircraft manufacturing considerations.
Subject Areas: Aerospace & aviation technology [TRP], Mechanical engineering & materials [TG]