BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS

1. The mean, minimum drag coefficients ( C D,B ) of a frozen, wingless peregrine falcon body and a smooth-surfaced model of the body were 0.24 and 0.14, respectively, at air speeds between 10.0 and 14.5 ms-1. These values were measured with a drag balance in a wind tunnel, and use the maximum crosss...

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Main Author: Tucker, VANCE A.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Company of Biologists 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/149/1/449
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:jexbio:149/1/449 2023-05-15T16:09:59+02:00 BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS Tucker, VANCE A. 1990-03-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/149/1/449 en eng Company of Biologists http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/149/1/449 Copyright (C) 1990, Company of Biologists Journal Articles TEXT 1990 fthighwire 2013-05-28T06:01:00Z 1. The mean, minimum drag coefficients ( C D,B ) of a frozen, wingless peregrine falcon body and a smooth-surfaced model of the body were 0.24 and 0.14, respectively, at air speeds between 10.0 and 14.5 ms-1. These values were measured with a drag balance in a wind tunnel, and use the maximum crosssectional area of the body as a reference area. The difference between the values indicates the effect of the feathers on body drag. Both values for C D,B a r e lower than those predicted from most other studies of avian body drag, which yield estimates of C D,B up to 0.41. 2. Several factors must be controlled to measure minimum drag on a frozen body. These include the condition of the feathers, the angle of the head and tail relative to the direction of air flow, and the interference drag generated by the drag balance and the strut on which the body is mounted. 3. This study describes techniques for measuring the interference drag generated by (a) the drag balance and mounting strut together and (b) the mounting strut alone. Corrections for interference drag may reduce the apparent body drag by more than 20%. 4. A gliding Harris' hawk ( Parabuteo unicinctus ), which has a body similar to that of the falcon in size and proportions, has an estimated body drag coefficient of 0.18. This value can be used to compute the profile drag coefficients of Harris' hawk wings when combined with data for this species in the adjoining paper (Tucker and Heine, 1990). Text Falco peregrinus peregrine falcon HighWire Press (Stanford University) Heine ENVELOPE(167.450,167.450,-78.083,-78.083)
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic Journal Articles
spellingShingle Journal Articles
Tucker, VANCE A.
BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS
topic_facet Journal Articles
description 1. The mean, minimum drag coefficients ( C D,B ) of a frozen, wingless peregrine falcon body and a smooth-surfaced model of the body were 0.24 and 0.14, respectively, at air speeds between 10.0 and 14.5 ms-1. These values were measured with a drag balance in a wind tunnel, and use the maximum crosssectional area of the body as a reference area. The difference between the values indicates the effect of the feathers on body drag. Both values for C D,B a r e lower than those predicted from most other studies of avian body drag, which yield estimates of C D,B up to 0.41. 2. Several factors must be controlled to measure minimum drag on a frozen body. These include the condition of the feathers, the angle of the head and tail relative to the direction of air flow, and the interference drag generated by the drag balance and the strut on which the body is mounted. 3. This study describes techniques for measuring the interference drag generated by (a) the drag balance and mounting strut together and (b) the mounting strut alone. Corrections for interference drag may reduce the apparent body drag by more than 20%. 4. A gliding Harris' hawk ( Parabuteo unicinctus ), which has a body similar to that of the falcon in size and proportions, has an estimated body drag coefficient of 0.18. This value can be used to compute the profile drag coefficients of Harris' hawk wings when combined with data for this species in the adjoining paper (Tucker and Heine, 1990).
format Text
author Tucker, VANCE A.
author_facet Tucker, VANCE A.
author_sort Tucker, VANCE A.
title BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS
title_short BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS
title_full BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS
title_fullStr BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS
title_full_unstemmed BODY DRAG, FEATHER DRAG AND INTERFERENCE DRAG OF THE MOUNTING STRUT IN A PEREGRINE FALCON,FALCO PEREGRINUS
title_sort body drag, feather drag and interference drag of the mounting strut in a peregrine falcon,falco peregrinus
publisher Company of Biologists
publishDate 1990
url http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/149/1/449
long_lat ENVELOPE(167.450,167.450,-78.083,-78.083)
geographic Heine
geographic_facet Heine
genre Falco peregrinus
peregrine falcon
genre_facet Falco peregrinus
peregrine falcon
op_relation http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/149/1/449
op_rights Copyright (C) 1990, Company of Biologists
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