Aircraft System Help: What is the Branch of Above?

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The discussion centers on the admission system of an aircraft, specifically the two branches depicted in an attached figure. The upper branch is identified as a closed system, likely designed to recirculate fluid and retain unwanted particles, while the lower branch is open, allowing air to exit into the turbomachinery. There is speculation that the closed branch could relate to bleed air, which is used to manage temperature during varying flight conditions. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding the system's design for efficient engine performance, particularly at high altitudes. Overall, the clarification provided by a classmate helped resolve initial uncertainties about the system's function.
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See the attached figure. It is the admision system of an aircraft (I think it admits supersonic flight). The air enters by the left side. But I'm not sure what are these two branches. The branch of above is closed (it is a recirculation of fluid there) and the below one is opened, so the air exits by there.

Any suggestion?

I would think the branch of above seems to be the entrance to the compressor, but it is closed.
 

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Its tough to tell from that pic, but could it be BLEED-AIR?
Higher compression ratios imply larger temperature rises; modern engines only achieve their high compression ratios at high altitude with very cold intake air (around –54 C). When taking off in warmer air they run at lower compression ratios to keep the temperature of the compressed air within turbine temperature limits by bleeding air away from the compressor stages and dumping it overboard.
 
Thanks for trying it. After being afraid for that, I have telephoned to one classmate and he has cleared me it up. The higher branch is some closed device for retaining undesired and strange particles. The lower one goes into the turbomachinery.

Anyway, thanks russ. It is a mesh for numerical computation.
 
Due to the constant never ending supply of "cool stuff" happening in Aerospace these days I'm creating this thread to consolidate posts every time something new comes along. Please feel free to add random information if its relevant. So to start things off here is the SpaceX Dragon launch coming up shortly, I'll be following up afterwards to see how it all goes. :smile: https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacex/
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