Description: Ex-company technical library with usual marks. Checked out five times. No dust jacket. Minor shelf handling wear to pages and covers. See pictures for a better idea of content and condition. OCR scan: RADIATIVE TRANSFER AND THERMAL CONTROL Edited byAllie M. SmithARO Inc.Arnold Air Force Station, Tennessee Volume 49PROGRESS INASTRONAUTICS AND AERONAUTICS Martin Summerfield, Series Editor-in-ChiefPrinceton University, Princeton, New Jersey Technical papers from AIAA 13th AerospaceSciences Meeting, January 1975, and the AIAA 10thThermophysics Conference, May 1975, subsequentlyrevised for this volume. Published by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Table of Contents Preface Editorial Committee for Volume Surface System Radiation Bidirectional Reflectance and Transmittance of aScattering.Absorbing Medium with a Rough SurfaceJ.E. ROGERS AND D.K. EDWARDS Finite-Element Solution for Radiative-ConductiveAnalyses with Mixed Diffuse-Specular SurfacesHWA-PING LEE AND CLIFTON E. JACKSON JR. Focusing Properties and Operation of a Hemiellip-soidal Mirror Infrared ReflectometerB.E. WOOD, J.G. PIPES, A.M. SMITH, AND J.A. ROUX An Investigation of Bidirectional Reflection fromInfrared Diffuser SurfacesB.E. WOOD AND A.M. SMITH Degradation of Low-Scatter Mirrors byParticle ContaminationR.P. YOUNG A Radiative Transfer Technique for StudyingNatural Convection in a Porous MediumLAWRENCE A. KENNEDY Fabric Coatings: A New Technique for SpacecraftPassive Temperature ControlA.E. EAGLES, S.J. BABJAK, AND J.H. WEAVER High-Purity Silica Reflective Heat-ShieldDevelopmentJ.C. BLOME, D.N. DRENNAN AND R.J. SCHMITT Gaseous Radiation Band Models and Correlations for Infrared RadiationS.N. TIWARI A Finite Difference Method for SolvingAnisotropic Scattering ProblemsBRUCE R. BARKSTROM Basic Spectrophotometric Measures of Air Qualityover Long PathsJ.S. HALL AND L.A. RILEY Predicted Radiation Trails from SmallArtificial MeteorsT. DWAYNE McCAY AND KENNETH E. HARWELL Thermal Conductivity and ContactResistance Analytical Models for Lunar Soil ThermalConductivityC.L. TIEN AND A.L. NAYAK Thermal Conductance and Thermal Conductivityof Selected Polyethylene MaterialsL.S. FLETCHER, M.R. CERZA, AND R.L. BOYSEN General Expressions for Circular ConstrictionResistances for Arbitrary Flux DistributionM. MICHAEL YOVANOVICH Thermal Constriction Resistance of Contacts on aHalf-Space: Integral FormulationM. MICHAEL YOVANOVICH Transient Heat Flow from a Thin Circular DiskG.E. SCHNEIDER, A.B. STRONG, ANDM.M. YOVANOVICH Heat Pipes Capillary Flow through Heat-Pipe WicksJAMES E. ENINGER Bubble Formation in Arteries of Gas-ControlledHeat PipesA. ABHAT, M. GROLL, AND M. HAGE Radiative Heating Environments for JovianEntry ConditionsWILLIAM E. NICOLET Viscous-Shock-Layer Solutions with Radiationand Ablation Injection for Jovian EntryJAMES N. MOSS, E. CLAY ANDERSON, ANDCHARLES A. BOLZ JR. Solar Collectors Trapezoidal Grooves as Moderately ConcentratingSolar Energy CollectorsJOHN R. HOWELL AND RICHARD B. BANNEROT Glass Solar Heat Collector DevelopmentR.B. GILLETTE, C. DEMINET, AND W.D. BEVERLY Numerical Modeling of Flat-Plate Solar CollectorsP.R. SMITH AND M.H. COBBLE Solar Collector Performance Prediction fromSolar Simulator TestsFREDERICK F. SIMON AND EDGAR H. BUYCO Transverse Header Heat PipeF. EDELSTEIN Measurements of the Performance of an Electro-hydrodynamic Heat PipeR.I. LOEHRKE AND R.J. DEBS Compatibility and Reliability of Heat-PipeMaterialsA. BASIULIS AND R.C. PRAGER Performance Analysis of the Advanced ThermalControl Flight ExperimentJ.P. KIRKPATRICK AND P.J. BRENNAN Index to Contributors to Volume 49 PREFACE Thermophysics is a multidisciplinary field of science and engineeringfounded on the principles of electromagnetic radiation, thermodynamics,and heat transfer. As a space technology utilized in the thermal design ofspacecraft and entry bodies, it has experienced a dramatic growth over thepast fifteen years and indeed has been molded into a well-defined subject ofconsiderable practical and fundamental importance. The rapid develop-ment of the field is attributed to its essential and major role in helping mansatisfy his basic desire to seek scientific and engineering information con-cerning space and planetary environments. Space projects planned for thefuture assure that thermophysics will continue its development as a majordiscipline in the aerospace sciences. Moreover, the advent of energy and en-vironmental technologies has stimulated strong interest in the application ofthermophysics to a variety of problems on Earth, such as collection of solarenergy for terrestial applications, air and water pollution, thermalpollution, and remote optical and infrared sensing of Earth's resources,energy potentials, and environmental changes. As a result of these newtechnologies, the field of thermophysics should broaden significantlyduring the next decade.The scope of thermophysics in the AIAA is defined as follows: "Studyand applications of properties and mechanisms involved in thermal energytransfer within and between solids, and between an object and its environ-ment, particularly by radiation. Study of environmental effects on suchproperties and mechanisms." It is evident from this charter that emphasis isplaced on radiative transfer, and rightly so, because of the importance ofthe role it assumes in the thermal control of spacecraft and the thermal en-vironment and protection of space probes entering planetary atmospheres.Thus, radiative transfer and thermal control, individually and collectively(since they are often strongly coupled), are obviously two of the most im-portant areas in thermophysics. Both are related to spacecraft and entryvehicle thermal design, whereas the former is also an essential element inspace and planetary environments. Each of the areas has experienced con-siderable growth and maturity in the past ten years, and several new and ex-citing developments are now taking place. The radiative transfer area nowincludes not only the traditional subjects of surface system and gaseousradiation but also the timely subject of solar collector radiative propertiesand performance. Surface radiation studies range from prediction andmeasurement of fundamental radiative properties of rough and con-taminated surface systems to the exploitation of basic radiative transferprinciples in the development of novel thermal control systems and analysistechniques for advanced spacecraft and outer planet entry probes. Gas-cous radiation remains an active subject as a result of the continuingdemand for a better understanding of radiation transport problems in plan-etary environments and atmospheric entry. In the thermal control area,
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Publication Year: 1976
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Book Title: Radiative Transfer and Thermal Control
Book Series: Progress in Aeronautics & Astronautics Volume 49
Author: Allie M. Smith
Publisher: American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics
Genre: Business, Economics & Industry, Engineering & Technology, Environment, Nature & Earth, Historical, History, Mathematics & Sciences, Military, Physics, Space Travel
Topic: Thermodynamics
Number of Pages: 551