The Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) successfully completed the first blow-down test to inaugurate the new trisonic wind tunnel.
The enormous structure gives the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) a powerful internal support system for space missions and the ability to conduct experiments in three speed regimes. According to the VSSC, it is a significant step toward national aeronautical self-sufficiency.
In this case, scale models of ISRO rockets and spacecraft were studied using wind tunnels, which are instruments designed to research the effects of air flows on solid things. At its widest point, the trisonic wind tunnel at VSSC is 5.4 metres tall and 160 metres long.
S. Somanath, the chairman of ISRO, turned on the blowdown.
A “blow down test” simulates flight circumstances by releasing stored gases and blowing them through the test section of the tunnel. According to the space agency, the tunnel can simulate flight circumstances at speeds ranging from 0.8 times the speed of sound (68 metres per second) to 4 times the speed of sound (1,360 metres per second).
The phrase “trisonic” describes the tunnel’s ability to conduct tests at three different speeds: subsonic, transonic, and supersonic (supersonic). Its components include air storage tanks, an airflow smoothening’ chamber, and nozzles for releasing air into the test portion.