FlyBieWire
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- Joined
- Apr 18, 2006
- Posts
- 21
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Alamanach said:As we go up, air density and temperature both go down at linear rates (usually).
Alamanach said:From Thermodynamics 101, we know that Pressure = Density x Temperature x (constant r), so pressure is going down as well. Under non-standard conditions, it is possible for temperature to drop faster than usual, while density stays where we expect. This has the effect of lowering pressure, and it is pressure that an altimeter measures. So the altimeter is measuring a low pressure-- which implies a high altitude-- but this is illusory due to the unusually cold air. The plane is not as high as your instrument says it is, look out below.
A Squared said:Not true. Take a look at a table of the pressure values for the standard atmosphere. It is a long way from being a linear function...
GravityHater said:What is the r.o.t. for those canadian approaches when it is supercold?? How and what do we adjust?
Alamanach said:Page 2 of Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators has an equation toward the end of the page that, I think, supports rather nicely my use of the Ideal Gas Law. By their equation, density is directly proportional to pressure and inversely proportional to temperature; D=P/T, which is saying the same thing as DT=P, which is pretty much what I said.
Alamanach said:If, as you point out, lower temperature is associated with higher density, it is because pressure is remaining constant. But constant pressure won't move our altimeter. If temperature changes while density holds constant, then pressure will change, and the altimeter will register that change. It is pressure, not density, that moves the aneroid wafers of the altimeter.
Alamanach said:Also, you seem to be saying that cold air makes the altimeter erroneously read a low altitude. If that's the case, (and you would know better than I) then there's some additional phenomenon at work; the basic relationship between temperature, pressure, and density runs in the other direction.
A Squared said:What you say isn't incorrect, as far as it goes, but it doesn't account for the phenomenon in question...
A Squared said:...denser air increases the pressure *lapse rate*...
Alamanach said:If we fly from some ISA air into a body of cold air, but at equal density, then by P=DT, we will see a drop in pressure,
Alamanach said:OK, I see what you're saying, and that could work if it is as you describe. But why would denser air increase the pressure lapse rate? (I'm not saying it doesn't, you're just off into something I'm not familiar with.)
A Squared said:Umm, no, it won't. Not necessarily. You seem to be adamant that the behavior of the atmosphere is absolutely and completely described by the ideal gas law. It's not. As I said before, extrememly cold temperatures are more often than not accompanied by higher than standard temperatures. Now, this is not predicted by the ideal gas law, so you have to conclude that either a) the ideal gas law is incorrect (it is not) or that b) the atmosphere is a little more complicated than one simple equation can completely account for.
because the pressure lapse rate is directly proportional to the densiy ofh te gas or fluid. I don't have time to give a more complete description right how. I'll try to get back to you a little later, but in the meantime, go back to my description of the altimeter underwater and think it through.
Donsa320 said:A-Squared I never did get back to you on how the aneroid wafer altimeters manage to follow the non-linear standard atmosphere pressure lapse rate so consistently. I managed to get to a licensed overhaul tech and he said... "I don't know". We will have to wait until a design engineer comes along to educate me/us, I guess. <bg>
DC
Donsa320 said:A-Squared I never did get back to you on how the aneroid wafer altimeters manage to follow the non-linear standard atmosphere pressure lapse rate so consistently. I managed to get to a licensed overhaul tech and he said... "I don't know". We will have to wait until a design engineer comes along to educate me/us, I guess.
UndauntedFlyer said:Your questions or comments are welcome......
Alamanach said:Yeah, if you can give us a similarly lucid explanation as to why this happens, I think we'll have another thread all wrapped up.
UndauntedFlyer said:The air is more vertically compacted on a cold day (because it's heavier) and it is less vertically compacted on a warm day (because it is lighter)...
...if a pilot is reading that altimeter he might think he is at 1100 feet when in reality he is at 1000 feet...
Alamanach said:So you're saying that cold air is denser and (by inference from the altimeter) at a lower pressure. That's pretty much what A Squared is saying. There's only one way I can get this to jibe with basic thermodynamics, and that is if the temperature drop has a greater effect on the pressue than the rise in density does.
And as it happens, the temperature lapse rate is linear while the density lapse rate is not. If I could superimpose plots of T and D, both as functions of altitude, I think I could show how a change in temperature will have a bigger effect than the comprable change in density (in some regions of the plot, at least). I'm sticking with my ideal gas law on this one.
UndauntedFlyer said:My advice it to forget about the engineering stuff and the thermodynamics...
Alamanach said:Too late!I typed the relevant numbers from Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators into Microsoft Excel, made a few plots, and crunched a few numbers. Here's what I found:
First of all, the Ideal Gas Law most definitely works for standard atmosphere. In fact, the fit is so good, I suspect the Ideal Gas Law may have gone into the definition of standard atmosphere.
Secondly, it is possible, as I speculated above, for the increase in density to be overcome by the decrease in temperature, resulting in a drop in pressure. As UndauntedFlyer and A Square have insisted, there is some shrinking of the atmosphere. However, it should be emphasized, that this vertical compaction is a smaller effect than the drop in temperature, and it tends to mitigate that temperature drop. We could say that the temperature drops so much, it actually causes some collapse of the atmosphere-- but not enough of a collpase to prevent a drop in pressure.
To steal a line from Undaunted Flyer, the Ideal Gas Law is the only correct way to understand this phenomenon.