Abstract:
The purpose of the present research is to investigate the spin and recovery
characteristics of a high performance fighter configuration that exhibits yawing
moment asymmetry at high angles of attack. High fidelity aerodynamic model,
in a look-up-tables form, is developed using experimental data from static,
coning, and oscillatory coning rotary balance wind tunnel tests. As a first step,
all the possible steady spin modes, along with their sensitivity to control
settings, are predicted from the aircraft flight dynamic model. Influence of high
alpha yawing moment asymmetry on the spin recovery characteristics is
inferred from the spin equilibria plots. Results from dynamical systems theory
are applied to determine local stability characteristics of aircraft around steady
spin states. The complete set of dynamic modes of aircraft in spin is evaluated
and mode content in each of the motion variable is determined using modal
decomposition.
Investigation of dynamic characteristics of predicted spin modes is
performed using six degrees-of-freedom time history simulations which
showed that both, right and left flat spins are oscillatory and divergent.
Standard spin recovery piloting strategies are investigated by performing
numerical simulations of flat spins in open-loop configuration. Numerical
simulations show that for fighter configuration with high-alpha yawing moment
asymmetry, same spin recovery strategies when applied to left and right flat
spins produce contradicting results. The proposed spin recovery strategies
effectively reduced the recovery time for left flat spins. However, aircraft's inherent tendency to yaw towards right due to high-alpha yawing moment
asymmetry renders proposed spin recovery strategies ineffective in
accelerating recovery of right flat spins. Performance of a gain scheduled flight
control law in automatic spin recovery is also evaluated by performing
numerical simulations of left and right flat spins in closed-loop configuration.
The control law also reduces the recovery time of the left flat spins but is
ineffective in aiding the recovery of the right flat spins. Simulations in closed
loop configuration show that the large amplitude oscillations in angle of attack
and sideslip, observed in open-loop configuration, are significantly damped by
the flight control law.