Schlieren Articles on aviation - Aerospace Engineering
airports worldwide
Other aviation articles
Airport photos
Aircraft photos
Spacecraft photos
Earth from airplane
Earth from space
Airports worldwide
Advertise for free!
Schlieren

By Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schlieren


Color schlieren image of the thermal plume from a burning candle, disturbed by a breeze from the right. Photographed by Gary S. Settles, Penn State University
Color schlieren image of the thermal plume from a burning candle, disturbed by a breeze from the right. Photographed by Gary S. Settles, Penn State University

Schlieren (from German; singular "Schliere") are optical inhomogeneities in transparent material not visible to the human eye. Schlieren physics developed out of the need to produce high-quality lenses void of these inhomogeneities. These inhomogeneities are localized differences in optical path length that cause light deviation. This light deviation is converted to shadow in a schlieren system.

History

Schlieren were first observed by Robert Hooke in 1665 using a large convex lens and two candles. One candle served as a light source. The warm air rising from the second candle provided the schliere. The conventional schlieren system is credited mostly to German physicist August Toepler. Toepler's original systemwas designed to detect schlieren in glass used to make lenses. In the conventional schlieren system , a point source is used to illuminate the test section containing the schliere. An image of this light is formed using a converging lens (also called a schlieren lens). This image is located at the conjugate distance to the lens according to the thin lens equation:  \frac{1}{f}=\frac{1}{d_o}+\frac{1}{d_i} where f is the focal length of the lens, do is the distance from the object to the lens and di is the distance from the image of the object to the lens. A knife edge at the point source-image location is positioned as to partially block some light from reaching the viewing screen. The illumination of the image is reduced uniformly. A second lens is used to image the test section to the viewing screen. The viewing screen is located a conjugate distance from the plane of the schliere.

Schlieren Flow Visualization

Schlieren flow visualization is based on the deflection of light by a refractive index gradient The index gradient is directly related to flow density gradient. The deflected light is compared to undeflected light at a viewing screen. The undisturbed light is partially blocked by a knife edge. The light that is deflected toward or away from the knife edge produces a shadow pattern depending upon whether it was previously blocked or unblocked. This shadow pattern is a light-intensity representation of the expansions (low density regions) and compressions (high density regions) which characterize flow.

See also

  1. ^ Hooke, R., "Of a New Property in the Air," Micrographia, Observation LVIII,217-219, London(1665).
  2. ^ Toepler, A., Beobachtungen nach einer neuen optischen Methode, Maximillan Cohen und Sohn, Bonn (1864).
  3. ^ Rienitz, J., "Schlieren Experiments 300 years ago," Nature[London] 254, 293-295 (March 27, 1975).
  4. ^ Settles, G. S., Schlieren and shadowgraph techniques: Visualizing phenomena in transparent media, Berlin:Springer-Verlag, 2001.

External links




Text from Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License; additional terms may apply.


Published in July 2009.




Click here to read more articles related to aviation and space!














christianity portal
directory of hotels worldwide
 
 

Copyright 2004-2024 © by Airports-Worldwide.com, Vyshenskoho st. 36, Lviv 79010, Ukraine
Legal Disclaimer