Abstract

The Thermal Protection System (TPS) is a significant portion of the mass of reentry vehicles, planetary probes, and Martian entry vehicles. Reducing this mass has benefits in terms of decreased fuel requirements and increased payload; however, due to the high risk and uncertainty, the TPS or heat shields are designed conservatively by assuming fully turbulent flow. Laminar flow results in reduced heat flux, and improved transition prediction has the potential to reduce TPS mass and uncertainty in aerothermodynamic predictions. Limited previous research exists examining the problem of transition prediction for Martian atmospheric entry, with studies available on transition on the Mars Science Laboratory TPS. Although transition was demonstrated in wind-tunnel tests, uncertainty in the transition location resulted in a TPS designed for fully turbulent flow, and therefore greater mass than required for a partially laminar condition. In this work, we extend the boundary layer stability code LASTRAC, recently modified to include chemical and thermal nonequilibrium capabilities, to a model of the Martian atmosphere. LASTRAC provides Parabolized Stability Equations (PSE) as well as Linear Stability Theory (LST) to predict the stability of a boundary layer and transition with semi-empirical e(sup N) methods. Results included in this work compare disturbance growth characteristics between air and Martian atmosphere at similar non-dimensional freestream conditions on a simple flat plate geometry. Both chemical nonequilibrium and thermochemical nonequilibrium, as well as both PSE and LST, are used.

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