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The hill has an element not present in the airfoil: flat ground surrounding it. The air flowing over the hill is deflected yet again after it passes the hill, so afterward it is again flowing parallel to the ground.olivermsun said:You yourself agreed in an earlier post that the net momentum change of the flow over the wing is important (the flow remains "downturned" after it passes by the wing). My point is that this condition is impossible for a symmetric hill (the flow cannot leave with net downward momentum since the ground is in the way). This places strong constraints on the net lift produced by the hill.
The flat ground in front of the hill similarly participates in deflecting the air up. The upward deflection of the air starts before the hill.
I just thought of something hilarious: If you put a hill in the flat part of an airplane wing, would the lift increase? I know you wouldn't likely do that because the penalty in drag would not be worth it, but it's an entertaining thought experiment.
NASA has on the web "Foilsim": http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/foil3.htmlolivermsun said:Could you link to some simulation results? The diagrams I was able to find of lift generated by a Frisbee all show an angle of attack, but my search was by no means exhaustive.
It does not do a frisbee, but it does various shapes of similar cross section. All convex top shapes with less convex (through to concave) bottom shapes have lift when parallel to the flow.
Here are some supposed experimental results (though it is just a line drawn on a piece of paper): Figure 2-3 in http://morleyfielddgc.files.wordpres...mmelthesis.pdf
It is easy to understand that there are local pressure differences over the top of a frisbee, but it is hard for me to understand why the sum of those pressure differences is less than zero.olivermsun said:I guess here it may be helpful to point out that pressure differences exist over airfoils, whether or not a net lift is generated.
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