Sunday, August 4, 2019
Airships :: essays research papers
 Airships      INDEX    PROLOGUE 2  TYPES OF AIRSHIP 2  RIGID AIRSHIP 2  NONRIGID AIRSHIP 3  HISTORY OF RIGID AIRSPS 3  HISTORY OF NONRIGID AIRSHIPS 4  AIRSHIPS TODAY 5  HINDENBURG 6  HINDENBURG DISASTER 7  PROLOGUE    An airship is a type of lighter-than-air aircraft with propulsion and steering  systems, it is used to carry passengers and cargo. It obtains its buoyancy  from the presence of a lighter-than-air gas such as hydrogen or helium. The  first airship was developed by the French, called a ballon dirigible, it could  be steered and could also be flown against the wind.    TYPES OF AIRSHIP    Two basic types of airship have been developed: the rigid airship, the shape of  which is fixed by its internal structure; and the nonrigid blimp, which depends  on the pressure created by a series of air diaphragms inside its gas space to  maintain the shape of its fabric hull. Inventors sought to combine the best  features of these models in a semirigid type, but it met with only limited  success. Today only the nonrigid airship is used.    Rigid Airship    The rigid airship's structure resembled a cage that enclosed a series of  balloons called gas cells. These cells were tailored to fit the cylindrical  space and were secured in place by a netting that transmitted the lifting force  of their gas to the structure. Each gas cell had two or more valves, which  operated automatically to relieve pressure when the gas expanded with altitude,  the valves could also be operated manually so that the pilot could release gas  whenever desired.    Also on board was a ballast system that used water as ballast. On the ground  this ballast served to make the airship heavier than air. When part of it was  released, the airship ascended to a cruising altitude where the engines supplied  propulsion, and further ballast could be released to gain more altitude. As fuel  was consumed, the airship became lighter and tended to climb. This was  countered in hydrogen-inflated airships by simply releasing gas into the  atmosphere.    The method was uneconomical, however, with helium-inflated airships, and they  were therefore equipped with ballast generators, apparatuses that condensed  moisture out of the engines' exhaust gases to compensate for fuel that was  consumed. But this ballast-generating equipment was expensive, complex, heavy,  and difficult to maintain and was thus one of the most serious disadvantages of  airships filled with the safer but more expensive helium.    Nonrigid Airship    In contrast to the rigid airship, the nonrigid blimp has no internal structure  to maintain the shape of its hull envelope, which is made of two or three plies  of cotton, nylon, or dacron impregnated with rubber for gas tightness. Inside  the gas space of the hull are two or more air diaphragms called ballonets that    					    
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