Abstract

With the development of the design technology, more and more advanced and diverse wind tunnels have been constructed to match complex requirements. However, it is hard to design a precise physical model of a wind tunnel that can be controlled. In addition, if a new wind tunnel is designed, the experimental data may be insufficient to build a controlling model. This article reports research on the following two models: (1) for a 0.6 m continuous transonic wind tunnel supported by a large amount of historical data, the false nearest neighbor (FNN) algorithm was adopted to calculate the order of the input variables, and the nonlinear auto-regressive model with the exogenous inputs–backpropagation network (NARX-BP) was proposed to build its Mach number prediction model; (2) for a new 2.4 m continuous transonic wind tunnel with only a small amount of experimental data, the method of model migration, the input and output slope/bias correction–particle swarm optimization (IOSBC-PSO) algorithm, was developed to convert the old model of the 0.6 m wind tunnel into the new model of the 2.4 m wind tunnel, so that the new Mach number prediction could be conducted. Through simulation experiments, it was found that by introducing the NARX-BP algorithm to build the Mach number prediction model, the root-mean-square error (RMSE) of the model decreased by 44.93–77.90%, and the maximum deviation (MD) decreased by 64.05–85.32% compared to the BP model. The performance of the IOSBC-PSO migration model was also better than that of the non-migration model, as evidenced by the 82.06% decrease of the RMSE value and the 78.25% decrease of the MD value. The experiments showed the effectiveness of the proposed strategy.

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