Welcome to Aerospace Engineering

You are now at the first screen of the Design-Centered Introduction (DCI) to the Aerospace Digital Library.For fast access to subject areas beyond the Introduction course, please use Table 1, below. For guided access, skip Table 1 and proceed with the introduction course.

Table 1: Direct Access to the Sub-Disciplines of Aerospace Engineering
Aerodynamics; Fluids
 Structures; 
Solids
Materials
 Propulsion
 Astronautics
  Flight Mechanics 
Controls; Avionics
 Design;
Manufacturing

 DESIGN-CENTERED INTRODUCTION TO

AEROSPACE ENGINEERING

  • Text books and data sources on aerospace engineering
  • Advanced Courses on Design Decision Making, Processes and Robustness
  • Topics

    1. Course Organization
    2. Today's Dreams in Various Speed Ranges
    3. Designing a Flight Vehicle: Route Map of Disciplines
    4. Mission Specification & TakeOff Weight
    5. Force Balance during flight
    6. Earth's Atmosphere
    7. Aerodynamics
    8. Propulsion
    9.Performance
    10. Stability
    11. Flight Control
    12. Structures and Materials
    13. High Speed Flight
    14. Space Flight

    1. Course Organization

    For over a century, aerospace engineers have led the progress of human technology, and brought the world closer together. Most simply, aerospace engineering is the realization of grand dreams through careful scientific thinking and planning, bold but informed innovation, and  dedicated pursuit of  perfection. It is the broadest of engineering disciplines, because it takes the best of all human knowledge to design, build, sell and operate a new (and always better!) aircraft or spacecraft, and to use it to the best advantage. Many aerospace projects appear so "far-out" that most people dismiss them as impossible, until they actually see them working: it is up to the AE to figure out these dreams, and reduce them to simple, step-by-step designs which are clean, simple, safe, cheap and reliable, so commonplace that anyone can use them and feel at home.

    Click here to scare yourself thinking about the simple process of flying home for Christmas

    So don't be surprised  when you read  that you can learn to design an airliner, starting out with a high-school background. The approach we take in this course is called the "Runway across Canyons".

    The various disciplines of aerospace engineering, such as aerodynamics, propulsion, etc. are like mountain ranges. Sometimes we feel like we have to climb down into a canyon and then up a steep wall to get to another discipline, i.e., to really understand all the things that people have figured out over the years. In this course, we lay out a "runway", bridging these canyons, so that we can go at high speed from aerodynamics to propulsion to flight mechanics, etc., on our way to developing our own conceptual design for an aircraft. We do have a few resources, shown on the control panel of our craft, as we start the takeoff roll...

    In this course we will use the motivation of designing a specific vehicle to learn about the various areas of aerospace engineering. So we will go off into one area after another, but always come back at the end of that detour, and do some more calculations or refinement of our design. All that you need is a notebook and pencil, a calculator for elementary calculations, and a spreadsheet.

    2. Some Dreams of Today

    The above picture is from the Clip Art  provided with Deneba Canvas 5 software.
    (Question: Which is the front end of this contraption?)
    The Wright Flyer must have looked incredibly sophisticated to the people of 1903. And it was. It was a canard design, with wings which had variable camber and twist, and the pilots had to perform extremely well. It could take off from an unprepared runway, under gusting wind conditions, and fly nap-of-the earth (very low altitude), an operation calling for precise flight control. Fortunately the beach at Kitty Hawk was quite flat.

    Likewise, today's designs look extremely sophisticated to us. They can fly over 100 times as fast as the Wright Flyer, and go right out into Space, circle the earth every hour or so, and return to precise touchdowns on earth. Have we reached the limits of aerospace engineering? Many people, even in the 1920s, thought that airplanes had reached the limits of speed and altitude, and had detailed theories proving that not much more could be gained by investing in thought or development of these wierd machines.  And today, still, we are just beginning. We have only about 100 years of powered flight experience, whereas the birds and insects that we see have evolved through maybe a million years of experience. We can't yet match them for control precision, landing versatility, payload fraction, engine weight fraction, fuel costs, maneuverability, reconfigurable geometry, or structure weight fraction.  Our machines are fragile and clumsy: if their engines quit or a piece breaks off,  they fall down quickly or even catch fire. They have stiff, rigid wings that can't flap, twist, fold or thrust to any significant degree. They need long runways and complex traffic control systems. You have to drive through 2 hours of downtown traffic and spend an hour and a half at the airport and another 30 minutes on the taxiway to make a flight of 200 miles. When we launch spacecraft, only about 30% of the structure and 10% of the total launch mass ever reaches orbit: the rest is wasted.

    The picture is of a rumored  "Aurora" aircraft which is rumored to be in flight testing from super-secret Air Force Bases. Some years ago, when the F-117 was still super-secret, there were plastic hobby kits of the F-117 available, and they had elegant shapes like that above. When unveiled, the F-117 did not look much like those shapes.

    Next Section:  Today's Dreams, and their technical requirements.
     
     
     

    Go to the other topics in the course.


    Acknowledgements:

    The pictures are from the  Pratt & Whitney  Web Page, the Boeing Web Page, NASA, and the U.S. Air Force Times Library.
    http://www.pratt-whitney.com/lce/lce.html
    http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/fa18/images/fa1835.htm
    http://www.pratt_whitney.com
    http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/gallery/index2.html