386 résultats
1978BN233152Amer Inst of Aeronautics & 1978. 1978. Hardcover. Turbulent Combustion Paas58: Technical Papers Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics V. 58 <br/><br/>Turbulent Combustion Paas58: Technical Papers Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics V. 58 Aiaa Aerospace Sciences Meeting Los Angeles Calif. 1977 15th; Kennedy Lawrence A.; American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Amer Inst of Aeronautics & hardcover
196640536New York: Gordon & Breach Science Pub 1966. First Edition. First Printing. good ex-lib. good. 402 & 348 2-vol. set illus. text in English and French v.2 has library markings. Complete subtitle: Proceedings of the AGARD-NATO Specialists' meeting sponsored by the Fluid Dynamics Panel of AGARD Marseille France April 20-24 1964. AGARDograph 87. In recognition of the numerous implications of space flight AGARD through the Fluid Dynamics Panel arranged for a Specialists' Meeting on this subject the first AGARD meeting which is clearly and exclusively devoted to space. Gordon & Breach Science Pub unknown
1957150413141Wright Air Development Center Air Research and Development Command U.S. Air Force 1957-01-01. Unknown Binding. Very Good. Wright Air Development Center, Air Research and Development Command, U.S. Air Force unknown
1998__1840148233Ashgate Pub Ltd 1998. Hardcover. New. illustrated edition. 250 pages. 9.50x6.50x1.00 inches. Ashgate Pub Ltd hardcover
196267236Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama: United States AIr University Aerospace Studies Institute 1962. Presumed first edition/first printing. Wraps. Good. Pencil erasure residue on t-p. Errata sheet stapled to t-p verso. Cover has some wear and soiling. iii 264 p. Includes: diagrams maps bibliography. Footnotes. Fold-out organizational charts. Author continues: "Concepts Division." This is an underrecognized but critically seminal work produced at the time the United States involvement in the Vietnam War was ramping up. It was an early analysis of the role of air power in insurgency/guerrilla warfare situations. As a product of the Aerospace Studies Institute of the Air University it was available to a broad range of field grade officiers to senior USAF leadership. This study was concerned with those aspects of guerrilla operations during the Second World War that related to the use of airpower ot either support guerrilla or counterguerrilla roles during the 1940-1945 time period. It examples the application of air poser by analyzing guerrilla campaigns. The study identified areas of effective applicaiton of air power as well as those where air power was not as effective as desired. AIr Supply was a signifcant element in the application of air power. Additionally specific aircraft characteristics were relevant and in some cases determinant with respect to the selection and application of specific air tactics. United States, AIr University, Aerospace Studies Institute paperback
19722081502112501363A5 Revised new edition Volume 1-5 First edition Volume 6-8 Boxed Publishing Co. Ltd. 1972. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 A5 Revised new edition [Volume 1-5] First edition [Volume 6-8] Boxed Publishing Co., Ltd. paperback
196409958US: Aerospace Research Laboratory Office of Aerospace Research U.S. Air Force 1964. First Edition. Paperback. Fair/No dust jacket. 10.7 x 8.4 x 0.8 inches. Paperback publication. The covers and title page have organization stamps number marked near the spine and the previous owner's name. The covers have some edge wear and tear and a few creases. The spine is creased. The binding is tight. The interior pages are clean and unmarked. Electronic delivery tracking will be issued free of charge. ARL 64-34 Aerospace Research Laboratory, Office of Aerospace Research, U.S. Air Force paperback
1970216453Washington DC: The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers 1970. Hardcover. Twenty four professionally bound volumes of the newspaper a complete run up to Feb. 1970. Large folios 11.5x19.25 inches all bound in maroon or brick red buckram with spine titles the newsprint is evenly browned without any chipping and still flexible some issues have mailing labels no other flaws. Illustrated. A very large and heavy set international shipping will be expensive. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers hardcover
1970216453Washington DC: The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers 1970. Hardcover. Twenty four professionally bound volumes of the newspaper a complete run up to Feb. 1970. Large folios 11.5x19.25 inches all bound in maroon or brick red buckram with spine titles the newsprint is evenly browned without any chipping and still flexible some issues have mailing labels no other flaws. Illustrated. A very large and heavy set international shipping will be expensive. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers hardcover books
1965223311965. Douglas Missile and Space Systems Division and McDonnell Douglas internal technical reports issued between 1965 and 1974 document the engineering infrastructure required for missile testing data acquisition and systems reliability during the Cold War. Produced for internal training and operational use these materials establish the technical foundations of missile deployment including environmental protection telemetry standardization and automated validation processes as missile systems increased in complexity during and after the Apollo era. The archive supports research into aerospace engineering defense industry practices and the integration of computing and instrumentation within missile systems development.<br /> <br /> Douglas Missile and Space Systems Division; McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company. Electrical Grounding and Lightning Protection Systems Design Recommendations. Santa Monica CA: Douglas Missile and Space Systems Division October 1965; Telemetry Instrumentation Fundamentals. Santa Monica or Huntington Beach CA: Douglas Missile and Space Systems Division n.d. late 1960s to early 1970s; Patzold F.W. Automated Missile Testing. Huntington Beach CA: McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company February 1974. Three technical reports totaling approximately 105 pages illustrated with photographs and technical schematics in original paper wraps. The grounding report by W.F. White outlines protection systems for missile facilities addressing "earth resistivity" lightning protection and grounding requirements for launch pads blockhouses and associated infrastructure. Telemetry Instrumentation Fundamentals provides a structured introduction to data acquisition systems stating that "telemetry must expand with the increased complexity of R & D" and detailing standards such as IRIG for coordinating data across missile platforms including Atlas Thor and Delta. Patzold's Automated Missile Testing paper presented at the American Society for Quality Control's 28th Annual Technical Conference describes a "production test system. for an advanced missile guidance system" incorporating software controlled testing environments vibration and hydraulic test stations and computer based evaluation systems to improve reliability and defect detection.<br /> <br /> These materials were produced during a period when missile systems required increasingly sophisticated support infrastructure including standardized telemetry for real time data transmission and automated testing systems to ensure performance reliability prior to deployment. The emphasis on lightning protection and grounding reflects the vulnerability of launch installations and sensitive electronic systems while the shift toward automation in the 1970s demonstrates the growing role of computer control in aerospace manufacturing and testing. Together the reports document the evolution from manually intensive engineering practices to integrated systematized approaches to missile validation within the defense industry. Light edge wear and curling to covers with minor interior smudging; text remains clear and fully legible; overall very good condition. unknown
1959223131959. Journal of the Aerospace Sciences 1959 documents foundational research in American aerospace engineering during the early Cold War space race. Published the year after the establishment of NASA and amid intensified U.S. efforts to match Soviet rocket achievements following the 1957 launch of Sputnik these issues contain contemporary technical studies on hypersonic aerodynamics missile stability spacecraft propulsion and planetary trajectory design. Articles by scientists and engineers working at leading research institutions and government laboratories record the theoretical groundwork that would shape the next decade of American spaceflight including early analytical work on Mars trajectories reentry materials and competing propulsion systems for interplanetary travel.<br /> <br /> Journal of the Aerospace Sciences. Volume 26 numbers 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 and 12. New York: Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences 1959. Eleven issues from the journal's 1959 volume lacking only the March issue. The periodical served as the principal research forum of the Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences the professional organization that later became the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Together these figures represent a cohort of scientists who would define American spaceflight theory and practice in the decade to come.Archive consists of 11 printed volumes in original wrappers approx. 50-80 pages per issue totaling over 800 pages.<br /> <br /> This archive includes:<br /> <br /> Volume 26 No. 1 January 1959: Features research on turbulent skin-friction drag at supersonic speeds jet nozzle structures nonlinear flutter problems and B-47 gust response. Includes Frank E. Goddard Jr. T.C. Adamson Jr. S.P. Shen.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 2 February 1959: Contains work on spiked bodies at hypersonic speeds reentry missile stability and panel flutter. Contributors include Seymour M. Bogdonoff E.V. Laitone and Frederick L. Ryder.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 4 April 1959: Publishes the Twenty-Second Wright Brothers Lecture by Maurice Roy of ONERA France. Other articles include thermal stresses hypersonic shock tunnels and boundary-layer transition.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 5 May 1959: Focuses on heat transfer at hypersonic speeds lift-drag ratios at supersonic speeds low-thrust spacecraft flight mechanics and chemically reacting boundary layers. Authors include A.J. Hanawalt Clinton E. Brown and Daniel E. Rosner.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 6 June 1959: Includes Hans Bethe's paper on the ablation of glassy materials structural matrix analysis and free-molecule flow dynamics.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 7 July 1959: Features M.A. Biot on thermomechanical reciprocity airplane turbulence responses and reentry motion. Also includes research on fatigue stress and laminar dissociated airflows.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 8 August 1959: Discusses transonic wing/body aerodynamics supersonic plate divergence mercury plasma tunnels and propellant burning models. Includes Hans U. Eckert.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 9 September 1959: Opens with Richard H. Battin's landmark article on planetary reconnaissance trajectories from MIT along with contributions on missile drag optimization rocket flight variational problems and real-gas flows.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 10 October 1959: Features George Paul Sutton's comprehensive comparison of interplanetary propulsion systems addressing ion rockets nuclear heating and solar sails. Also includes optimal aircraft climb paths and spherical cap snapping.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 11 November 1959: Includes studies on flutter energy equations jet-flap compressors porous-wall cooling and actuator disc dynamics in turbomachinery.<br /> <br /> Vol. 26 No. 12 December 1959: Closes the year with work on thermal buckling subsonic turbulence reattachment zoom climb optimization and hypersonic similitude. Contributors include Carl Gazley Jr. Wallace D. Hayes and George Gerard.<br /> <br /> In 1959 the Journal of the Aerospace Sciences served as the official scientific platform for cutting-edge American aerospace research marking the transition from aeronautical to astronautical engineering. That year saw sustained focus on hypersonics ballistic missile trajectories spacecraft propulsion and heat transfer under extreme atmospheric conditions as the U.S. sought to stabilize its strategic position after the 1957 Sputnik crisis and ahead of the 1960 Mercury program. Research in these volumes was underwritten by military contracts NASA collaboration established in 1958 and Cold War exigencies. Light foxing to several wrappers particularly July issue; some edge wear and surface abrasions. Two issues show sticker residue at spine or lower edge. Interiors uniformly clean bindings firm and covers largely bright and intact. Overall very good condition. The studies record the technical environment that produced early American satellite programs and later lunar navigation systems linking university laboratories defense contractors and federal research agencies. unknown