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#31
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
On 8 Dec 2006 18:39:30 -0500, "Ash Wyllie" wrote:
Mxsmanic opined writes: On a clear night the skin temperature can go BELOW the air temperature due to the radiation losses into space. The temperature of the aircraft won't drop below the temperature of the ambient air, as long as the aircraft is dry. Actually, it can. I have seen frost on metal surfaces (like wings) when the air temp is above freezing. Taxiing will sometimes melt frost. As usual, mxsmanic is both right and wrong (as in 'a little knowledge can be a dfangerous thing"). When the skin radiates, it cools down, and will cool the air in contact with its surface. This creates a thin inversion layer, which (in the absence of any appreciable wind) is stable. The air temperateure a few millimeters above the skin will be significantly warmer. A clear night sky is /cold./ -ash Cthulhu in 2005! Why wait for nature? |
#32
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
Ash Wyllie writes:
Look up _radiational cooling_. I'm familiar with it, and with blackbody radiation. Space is in the single digits absolute, and the atmosphere is pretty much transparent to radiation. The atmosphere not only absorbs and reflects the blackbody radiation emitted by most objects on the ground at ordinary temperatures, it also emits radiation of its own (as does anything with a non-zero absolute temperature). Objects will radiate energy trying to heat up interstellar space, and cool in the process. The surface of the planet is not part of interstellar space. Everything on the surface of the Earth cools through emission of radiation, but aircraft do not do this to any greater extent than anything else, and they don't cool to subfreezing temperatures in air that is above freezing. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#33
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
"Ash Wyllie" wrote in message ... Look up _radiational cooling_ . Space is in the single digits absolute, and the atmosphere is pretty much transparent to radiation. Objects will radiate energy trying to heat up interstellar space, and cool in the process. Ash, I'd like to expand a bit on your statements. In the 3-5 and 8-12 micrometer region of the electromagnetic spectrum, atmospheric transmission is, like you said, close to 100% transparent. Outer space, in those bands, is to photons like a Hoover is to dust in the carpet - it just sucks heat right out. The rate at which the transfer of photons occurs is dependent on, among other things, the emmissivity of the surface and the thermal conductivity from the mass to that surface. The perfect case is a gaussian emmissivity of one, and since perfection is difficult, the closest you can come is a bunch of nines behind the decimal point. A pure white specular surface is at the opposite end of the scale. One good example to back up your statement is in the winter time. We have all felt the phenomena when the sky is clear that the nights are much colder than when the sky is overcast. That is because interstellar space is sucking the heat off the planet's surface. The adjacent atmosphere loses a lot of its energy to the surface and its temperature decreases also. Please, don't confuse the cloud cover effect with the so-called "greenhouse" effect. I always used the term "radiative cooling" (not radiational) to keep in tune with NASA's glossary: (http://eobglossary.gsfc.nasa.gov/Lib...seg=q&segend=s) radiative cooling Cooling process of the Earth's surface and adjacent air, which occurs when infrared (heat) energy radiates from the surface of the Earth upward through the atmosphere into space. Air near the surface transfers its thermal energy to the nearby ground through conduction, so that radiative cooling lowers the temperature of both the surface and the lowest part of the atmosphere. Oh, did I mention that I spent the better part of two decades doing infrared measurements using a Michelson Interferometric Spectrometer? [Don't try saying that with more than two drinks under your belt.] A lot of that dealt with radiative transfer. |
#34
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
"Ash Wyllie" wrote Look up _radiational cooling_ . Space is in the single digits absolute, and the atmosphere is pretty much transparent to radiation. Objects will radiate energy trying to heat up interstellar space, and cool in the process. You might drop in on some of the amatuer telescope groups. They have the same problem. Why on earth are you arguing with this BoZo? He doesn't know **** from shinola, and has proven it on many occasions and many subjects, yet still he argues with people that do know, and then tells them that they are not qualified to make statements on xyz subject. You only contribute to him overstaying his welcome even longer! -- Jim in NC |
#35
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
Morgans opined
"Ash Wyllie" wrote Look up _radiational cooling_ . Space is in the single digits absolute, and the atmosphere is pretty much transparent to radiation. Objects will radiate energy trying to heat up interstellar space, and cool in the process. You might drop in on some of the amatuer telescope groups. They have the same problem. Why on earth are you arguing with this BoZo? He doesn't know **** from shinola, and has proven it on many occasions and many subjects, yet still he argues with people that do know, and then tells them that they are not qualified to make statements on xyz subject. I've quit doing so here. Mx is impervious to experience, and science. You only contribute to him overstaying his welcome even longer! -ash Cthulhu in 2005! Why wait for nature? |
#36
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
"Peter R." wrote in message ... A question for those of you more adept at chemistry/physics than I: How fast does the aluminum skin of the standard single engine GA aircraft take to cool to surrounding air temperatures? For example, how long would it take for the skin to cool from a heated hangar at 65 degrees F to outside air at 20 degrees F? This is my first winter where my airplane sits at my destination airport (Buffalo, NY) all week in a heated hangar. The problem I just inherited is that if I desire to depart during a lake effect snowfall event, falling snow could melt on the wings and fuselage and then turn to ice. -- You might be better off to taxi out with 20 degree wings that will not have the snow melt and attach. Danny Peter |
#37
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
Danny Dot writes:
You might be better off to taxi out with 20 degree wings that will not have the snow melt and attach. The wings couldn't melt snow _and_ freeze it. They could freeze water droplets, or melt ice particles, but not both. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#38
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
The snow would most likely melt over the fuel tanks (if it's a wet skinned tank) then flow aft and freeze again. I don't remember ever having the problem, but the only time our Mooney saw the inside of a heated hanger was when it needed to have snow and ice melted from it. At least once I climbed aboard after it was hanger heat soaked then took off in fairly light snow (vis at least a half mile.) I wasn't smart enough to worry about snow melting and refreezing -- my concern was braking, or lack of it! It couldn't have been too bad though, the airplane didn't move during run up. I think even with warm fuel tanks, the convective cooling would pretty quickly get the wing surfaces cool enough to keep the white stuff solid. On Dec 10, 5:28 pm, "Danny Dot" wrote: "Peter R." wrote in ... A question for those of you more adept at chemistry/physics than I: How fast does the aluminum skin of the standard single engine GA aircraft take to cool to surrounding air temperatures? For example, how long would it take for the skin to cool from a heated hangar at 65 degrees F to outside air at 20 degrees F? This is my first winter where my airplane sits at my destination airport (Buffalo, NY) all week in a heated hangar. The problem I just inherited is that if I desire to depart during a lake effect snowfall event, falling snow could melt on the wings and fuselage and then turn to ice. --You might be better off to taxi out with 20 degree wings that will not have the snow melt and attach. Danny Peter- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - |
#39
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
"Ash Wyllie" wrote I've quit doing so here. Mx is impervious to experience, and science. Great! Another one leaves the "Dark Side" of the force! g You will feel better, if you don't fight with him, I think. -- Jim in NC |
#40
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How fast does the skin of the airplane cool to surrounding temperatures?
Mxsmanic wrote:
Peter R. writes: A question for those of you more adept at chemistry/physics than I: How fast does the aluminum skin of the standard single engine GA aircraft take to cool to surrounding air temperatures? For example, how long would it take for the skin to cool from a heated hangar at 65 degrees F to outside air at 20 degrees F? Nor more than a couple of minutes. Aluminum is an excellent conductor of heat. How well aluminum conducts heat has nothing to do with it. It is all matter of thermal mass and surface area to mass ratio. The good heat conductivity or aluminum means that once the outside of the plane has cooled off, the inside will cool off fast too. -- Chris W KE5GIX "Protect your digital freedom and privacy, eliminate DRM, learn more at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm" Gift Giving Made Easy Get the gifts you want & give the gifts they want One stop wish list for any gift, from anywhere, for any occasion! http://thewishzone.com |
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