Musical Wings Reduce Aircraft Stall Risk 235
notwrong writes "The Sydney Morning Herald is reporting that a Qantas engineer has found a way to help small aircraft avoid stalling at low speeds: pumping sound through the wings. He found that music also works, having tested Spiderbait and Radiohead (nice choices; Spiderbait apparently works better)."
Other bands to test... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Oh, wait, were you making a joke about the name?
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
They suck like a septic pump.
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
So did JFK Jr. listen to the Dead Kennedys when he put his plane in the drink?
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Stairway to Heaven, Wind Beneath my Wings, Bird on the Wire.
The theory is that it's all about flapping. How would I know? "What was Emilio doing on the floor?" "Flapping." (Kill Bill Vol 2). Maybe flapping isn't enough after all. I just wouldn't recommend flying in stall conditions.
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
LOL!
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:5, Funny)
Define irony: a bunch of idiots dancing around on a plane kept in the air by a song made famous by a band that died in a plane crash.
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2, Informative)
(it's slightly a slightly rewritten line from that movie):
"Define irony: a bunch of idiots dancing around on a plane to a song made famous by a band that died in a plane crash."
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
Re:Other bands to test... (Score:2)
From the article (Score:3, Funny)
Only for the typical Auzzie who thinks tie-dying is fashionable.
Re:From the article (Score:3, Informative)
Just hope.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just hope.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just hope.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just hope.... (Score:2)
Pump the wings full of Aphex Airlines (Score:2)
Re:Pump the wings full of Aphex Airlines (Score:2)
Re:Pump the wings full of Aphex Airlines (Score:2)
Mal-2
What about Megadeth's ... (Score:2)
Mr. Qantas aerospace engineer.. (Score:5, Funny)
new business model for the RIAA (Score:5, Funny)
I dunno... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I dunno... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I dunno... (Score:2)
Re:I dunno... (Score:2)
My Cessna 182 was built in 1978. It's wings are full of shag carpet and polyester.
Maybe taking this too far? (Score:3, Interesting)
Mr Salmon said that if they could make small aircraft perform better at low speed, it should be possible to build planes with smaller wings, which would be lighter, less thirsty, and thus cheaper to fly.
I can see the headlines already- "Airplane crashes due to smudged CD"
More seriously, have they done studies comparing the frequency of the sound vs air pressure/density? It's possible that other bands would perform better at altitude- maybe they could finally find an appropriate place to play Wings cd's...
Re:Maybe taking this too far? (Score:2)
Next time I go flying (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Next time I go flying (Score:2)
Sorry.
Re:Next time I go flying (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Ride of the Valkyries (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ride of the Valkyries (Score:2)
Re:Ride of the Valkyries (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ride of the Valkyries (Score:2)
And these tiny little transitors things that computer geeks always talk about.
Re:Ride of the Valkyries (Score:2)
Re:Ride of the Valkyries (Score:2)
Ok, let's re-analyse my post - I said that Americans are responsible for the commercialisation of products invented elsewhere in the world... Things you mention:
Computers - invented by Charles Babbage, or the electronic version was invented during World War II at Bletchley Park... By a team of Brits.
CP/M? That's not even an invention, there were OS's of almost comparable quality before then, true, it was a massive advancement, but I hardly call it a radical invention
Re:Ride of the Valkyries (Score:2)
Isn't this just an example of dither? (Score:4, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dither [wikipedia.org]
So take (Score:3, Funny)
And learn to fly again, learn to live so free
Just like birds? (Score:5, Interesting)
Vortex Generators (Score:5, Insightful)
I am a pilot who flies my own small plane and prefer to simply keep my airspeed up to avoid stalling the wings, and keep the music in my headsets. An iAudio X5 mp3 player [cowonamerica.com] fed thru a set of Lightspeed Thirty 3G ANR headsets [anrheadsets.com] while you're flying is a great experience.
Re:Vortex Generators (Score:2)
Re:Vortex Generators (Score:2)
Re:Vortex Generators (Score:2)
Musical wings (Score:5, Insightful)
Where does this energy come from? Either APUs, or more powerful main engines... which are heavier... which means bigger wings...
Re:Musical wings (Score:5, Insightful)
>Where does this energy come from? Either APUs, or more powerful main engines... which are heavier... which means bigger wings...
Of course, if the effect they were discussing was a reduction in drag you may well have a point, since reducing the low speed stall of the wing was the actual effect I guess you missed the mark a little.
But of course, this is a well know effect. The sound produces surface turbulence in the zone where the laminar flow breaks down, and helps to keep the flow attached to a slightly higher angle of attack.
Generally 'tripwires', surface steps, and small turbulator fins are used for this effect, however they operate at fixed positions. This system is a little more general, although comes at an energy (and indeed drag) cost.
An interesting approach would be to detect the development of stall and hit the vibration generators then, which would work great except it is very hard to re-attach flow once it breaks down, and very hard to detect stall before the flow detaches.
All in all, someone with a media connection has decided to ride a bit of common knowledge, good on them.
70's all the way (Score:2)
Probably a similar phenomenon (Score:3, Interesting)
I suspect that both methods work by adding kinetic energy to the flow, but IANAAE.
Re:Probably a similar phenomenon (Score:2, Interesting)
Could it be as simple as rerouting engine noise back to perturb or dither the airflow on the wings be sufficient?
Or maybe one would have to tune the spectral content of the noise for the flight condition of the moment?
Interesting observation, but I am not one to wanna make anything more complicated than it needs to be.
Re:Probably a similar phenomenon (Score:3, Informative)
The significance of this has nothing to do with adding kinetic energy to the flow, and everything to do with adding small-scale irregularities to it. It's the same reason why golf balls are dimples, why putting a little sand in the top
Re:Probably a similar phenomenon (Score:3, Funny)
Fragile (Score:2)
Re:Fragile (Score:2)
Prior art. (Score:3, Funny)
Besides, with enough bees we could even get VTOL.
The only problem is making all bees fly in one direction. We are trying to tame them and teach them to act like eskimo dogs, but it's been hard.
The flower-ahead-of-the-plane trick works for some time, but they get bored real fast. OTOH, when my cousin walks ahead of the plane, they fly it for hours trying to get to him.
Maybe it's like that duckling thing they made a film about. Oh, it's so cute!
Re:Prior art. (Score:2)
Re:Prior art. (Score:2)
Spiderbait (slightly O/T) (Score:2)
Any other examples of small-aircraft-saving music that you guys enjoy?
Re:Spiderbait (slightly O/T) (Score:2)
smaller wings? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:smaller wings? (Score:2)
But what's wrong with taking something that's been established at an acceptable level of safety and achieving that same level of safety a different way that allows an improvement in performance? Would you rather we go back to rail travel at the same speed as it used to be when tr
Instead of sound in the wings... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Instead of sound in the wings... (Score:2)
Iron Butterfly (Score:4, Funny)
Speaking as a pilot (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, it would pose engineering problems. Aircraft like the C172 I fly have wings that are specifically designed to stall in a very particular way. It's wings stall from the inside out, so that aileron control is maintained as long as possible. In fact, despite my repeated attempts, I've never been able to get into a stall deep enough for the ailerons to stop working. The point is that sound transducers would change all of this high precision engineering. What would happen if a single speaker went out? Would the plane go into an irrecoverable barrel roll?
Also, stalls really aren't that big a deal if you know your ass from a hole in the ground. The people who get into trouble with stalls are idiot doctors who bought their fancy Cirruses and flying lessons at the same time and never give flying the respect it truly deserves. But that is another story.
Re:Speaking as a pilot (Score:2)
Re:Speaking as a pilot (Score:2, Troll)
Very funny. Any roughly rectangular wing will stall from the inside out. It's only when the wing is tapered more strongly than an ellipse that you risk stalling at the tips first. To further minimize the risk of the tips stalling, the wingtips are usually angled down (washed out) a couple degrees (compared to the rest of the wing) or they incorporate a different airfoil
Re:Speaking as a pilot (Score:2)
Re:Speaking as a pilot (Score:2)
Actually that would be the very worst situation for that kind of technology from a safety standpoint. Transducer gives out, and you suddenly find yourself in a departure stall. A departure stall will KILL you. No altitude, no airspeed, just about the time you are supposed to be clearing the trees at the end of the strip.
Aliens already have this! (Score:2)
Musical Wings? (Score:2, Funny)
"Hey where's Tommy?"
"He got sucked into the turbines during the last round."
Why UFOs always have that humming noise (Score:2, Funny)
The Corrs!!! (Score:2)
Uhm, maybe not, watching the Corrs is not likely to stall anything...might even speed it up to the discomfort of your "wing man"...
Re:Obscure reference? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Obscure reference? (Score:2)
Re:Obscure reference? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Obscure reference? (Score:2)
Only on Slashdot could you ever see a song become part of a hierarchical view.
But it's not a POSIX path, so I'm afraid you still don't win the "supernerd" prize.
Re:Obscure reference? (Score:2)
If I really need to find something, iTunes can show me where the file is, or Spotlight can.
Re:Obscure reference? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Is that because... (Score:2)
Be afraid.
Re:As a pilot (Score:5, Insightful)
Suggest you quit your job and start living in a cave, to avoid linux. Oh, maybe you already do, troll.
Re:As a pilot (Score:5, Informative)
So what do you do if ya want complex and sofisticated system calls that the Integrity-178B doesn't provide? Well, use another real-time os on top of Integrity-178B or make it part of Integrity-178B but run it in user mode. So all the drivers are really in user mode in such a system. This all is needed so that no single program if corrupted can hang the system. (Trust me you don't want an airliner's computer to freeze with a BSoD or with a Oops!-Kernel Panic while in mid-air).
Another side note, FAA actually has a concrete limit on the failure due to software. So something like no more than once out of tens of millions of flight hours a plane full of people is allowed to completely crash and burn because of a software problem and have everyone on board die a horrible and painfull death and that would be perfectly "ok" with FAA. So the requirements to certify a system (OS) to fly a plane are very stringent. Linux doesn't even come close. It might be good enough to play music though...
Re:As a pilot (Score:2)
How does the RTOS actually know what it is supposed to do? I would think that some actual application code that runs on it would define what the system does.
If the this Operating System lets you run Turing-complete code, won't it run into the halting problem when trying to find out if that code does something correct or not? I don't think you can mathematically predict what any computer system wil
Re:As a pilot (Score:2, Informative)
Re:As a pilot (Score:5, Informative)
Imagine that you have a 3 line program that computes the absolute value of some input x say {if(x>=0) abs=x; else abs=-x; return abs;}. Ok do you think you'll be able to write another program that will verify that this program works correctly?
You would look at it and perhaps see that it has one branch. We give it inputs such that both paths in the branch are taken and then you look at the output and see if it is what you want it to be, and _also_ you look at all the rest of the memory and make sure that it didn't change. Maybe give it some extreme values, like the maximums and minimums and then also look at output and the _whole_ memory.
Then can you do the same for a 'for' loop that computes a dot product. You just give the program the known input then at every iteration look for some loop invariants and also check the rest of the memory that shouldn't be affected that it is indeed not affected and then check the output.
Also this means that the code itself has to be written in a certain way in order for its correctness to be checked easily. That means that a lot of nested 'if's are not a good idea, so they try to reduce the branching as much as possible and modularize the program. It is the burden of the software developers to submit their code for certification and pass before it is accepted by FAA or DoD.
This actually can be reduced to the SAT problem, which runs in exponential time (but there are ways to take shortcuts in some of the cases).
I would think that some actual application code that runs on it would define what the system does.
First though before you even let any application code run you have to make sure that no single appliation will ever take control of the memory and cpu for more than it's allowed share. That is what the separation kernel does. You run this small provem and scrutinized piece of code (note: you also need specialized hardware to make sure it will work) that makes absolutely sure (up to a margin of error) that no application will take more than its share of resourses. So if one application crashes it will not crash the system, instead the rest of the machine will continue to work. So that is why sometimes they will run two RTOSes on top of each other with the first being Integrity-178B that will make sure the other OSes on top are partitioned and separated and allocated only a given share of resourses.
Re:As a pilot (Score:3, Insightful)
Proving algorithms has been part of *real* computer science for decades, and is part of what separates the actual "computer science" folks from the programmers (and the real computer science universities from those which are actually just glorified trade schools).
I'm saying this as a programmer; I don't prove my algorithms personally, but I respect those that do.
Re:As a pilot (Score:3, Informative)
Re:As a pilot (Score:2)
This i
Re:As a pilot (Score:2)
Re:As a pilot (Score:2, Funny)
Re:As a pilot (Score:2, Funny)
OK, I'm really stopping now.