SCHLIEREN OPTICAL SYSTEM & AERODYNAMIC TESTS 1958 SHELL OIL CO. EDUCATIONAL FILM XD13174 Schlieren

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
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    This color educational film is about the Schlieren system to detect optical imperfections and for aerodynamic testing of airflow. This optical system detects changes within a test area medium (air) and records the changes in the form of an image on a screen. The image is formed by refraction and scattering from what is introduced into the test area, which are areas of varying refractive index. This film was made in 1958.
    Schlieren (from German; singular "Schliere", meaning "streak") are optical inhomogeneities in transparent material not necessarily visible to the human eye. Schlieren physics developed out of the need to produce high-quality lenses devoid of these inhomogeneities. These inhomogeneities are localized differences in optical path length that cause light deviation. This light deviation can produce localized brightening, darkening, or even color changes in an image, depending on which way the ray deviates. Schlieren flow visualization is based on the deflection of light by a refractive index gradient The index gradient is directly related to flow density gradient. The deflected light is compared to undeflected light at a viewing screen. The undisturbed light is partially blocked by a knife edge. The light that is deflected toward or away from the knife edge produces a shadow pattern depending upon whether it was previously blocked or unblocked. This shadow pattern is a light-intensity representation of the expansions (low density regions) and compressions (high density regions) which characterize the flow.
    Opening: exterior shot of the Illinois State Museum, Springfield, IL. Titles: "Schlieren A Shell Film" (:06-1:09). Parallel wires. Glass is waved in front of the wires. A new system was created: the Schlieren system was created to find streaks in glass. We see the Schlieren system and how it works - moving the glass by hand in front of the lines. Testing glass in front of the lines. Color Schlieren is shown (1:10-3:07). A high speed wind tunnel experiment. Men observe and photograph. Different colors mean different things. Schlieren system is used to observe. The principal of the Schlieren system is explained and shown with a light. A man adjusts a mirror and positions it. A beam of light is shown in diagram. A camera is put into position by a man. A diagram shows what will happen with the lens. A man looks through the camera lens. Two shadowy hands make a shadow dog on the wall. A man adjusts a camera as another person enters the room in a birdseye pov shot. A man puts a black line on a piece of wood (3:08-7:18). An animated diagram explains air density. A shockwave is explained and shown in an animated diagram. Bent light is shown. A color filter is held by two hands. It is then placed in front of a camera lens. Animation shows bent light. Red shows increasing density. A light experiment shown in animation (7:19-10:34). Flow patterns are compared at different sound speeds. Schlieren shows a flow pattern. A model of an airplane is shown in an airflow at nearly twice the speed of sound. It is moved around on a stick. Schlieren system can be invaluable (10:35-13:56). Temperature variations are shown as air warmed by shadowy hands is pictured. Air cooled by a mouth, licking ice cream, is shown in shadow. A bottle has a colorless heavy gas and the Schlieren system shows it. Flames can be studied under the Schlieren system (13:57-14:58). Sugar put into water under the Schlieren system - sugar sinks to the bottom of the glass. A spray is shown under the Schlieren system. The effect of pouring clear liquid into another (14:59-16:20). A shockwave is shown slowed down in the Schlieren system. Warm water on the left, cold on the right shown under the Schlieren system. The two waters meet and this can be clearly seen (16:21-18:02). A person plays a clarinet and under the Schlieren system, air can be seen pouring out of the holes. A squirt gun shoots water onto the instrument (18:03-18:17). Fade to black, no end credits (18:18-18:19).
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    This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFi...

Комментарии • 28

  • @michaelslee4336
    @michaelslee4336 4 года назад +4

    I have known about Schlieren for quite a while but sort of at the level that it involved "bendy bendy light" but that was about it.
    This film was fantastic to tie up the loose ends for me. Thanks so much.

  • @markproulx1472
    @markproulx1472 4 года назад +3

    The people who developed this technology were true geniuses.

  • @substrate001
    @substrate001 4 года назад +5

    Fascinating film, thanks for posting! ✈ Airplane wing & helicopter rotor designs, boat propellers, bullet profiles all benefitted greatly from research done using this technology. 💯

    • @substrate001
      @substrate001 4 года назад +2

      @6 6 Yes, great comment! I wonder how many saw the mesmerising patterns of a 'heavier than air' gas or the fractal patterns contained in a flame? Plenty, I would think. Reminds me of Mandelbrot & his work, in a way. Something exists in Nature, man learns to visualise it, understand it and then, incredibly - model it in computer code. Simply amazing!

    • @cowboybob7093
      @cowboybob7093 4 года назад

      @6 6 And evolutionary, the computer models that make it obsolete.

  • @rickintexas1584
    @rickintexas1584 Год назад

    That was absolutely fascinating. I thought I understood Schlieren photography, but my knowledge only scratched the surface. We used a Schlieren imaging system back in the early 80s to visualize a shock wave while in college. My degree was Aeronautical Engineering.

  • @andyZ3500s
    @andyZ3500s 4 года назад +2

    This was a very interesting video, it put alot of pieces of information together for me. By the way this video wasn't made in 1958. At the beginning there was a 66 or 67 Plymouth and a 66 Chevrolet impala. Thanks for posting, I love the scientific videos

  • @etanneriii
    @etanneriii 2 года назад

    amazing.

  • @cowboybob7093
    @cowboybob7093 4 года назад

    Thanks Periscope

  • @AppliedCryogenics
    @AppliedCryogenics Год назад

    This narrator sounds so much like the one from the US TV show "Forensic Files"!

  • @mene2254
    @mene2254 4 года назад

    very good, i liked it.

  • @wntu4
    @wntu4 4 года назад

    Smarter Every Day used this to photograph .50 cal bullet shockwaves at high speed. Really cool to see.

  • @erickrobertson7089
    @erickrobertson7089 4 года назад +2

    The narrator sounds like Peter Thomas (Forensic Files).

  • @PapaSchlumpf78
    @PapaSchlumpf78 Год назад

    schlieren is the name of a district of Zurich.

  • @bingosunnoon9341
    @bingosunnoon9341 2 года назад

    1958? How did a 65 Ford Galaxy get into the opening shot?

  • @rustystove8410
    @rustystove8410 4 года назад

    Schlieren would be interesting to see the air flow patters in an operating room, and the
    airflow when the air mask is on the patient.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 4 года назад +1

      Similar things have been done: vimeo.com/399120258

  • @videolabguy
    @videolabguy 4 года назад +2

    A modern remake would include the dispersion of flatulence. Proving, once and for all, that he who smelt it, dealt it! A bonus shot would be ignition of flatus. Just saying.

  • @joergmaass
    @joergmaass 4 года назад +1

    It is actually spoken as "shleeren" for the poor souls out there who don't speak German...:-)

  • @horatiodreamt
    @horatiodreamt 4 года назад

    This would be great fun at parties when someone spills drinks on the pinochle cards and the pinochle players become greatly disappointed because their cards are soggy.

  • @stevewhite6252
    @stevewhite6252 4 года назад

    All done without computers.

  • @SuperScottCrawford
    @SuperScottCrawford 4 года назад

    That man had dog hands!

    • @deanrobert8674
      @deanrobert8674 4 года назад

      Lol, I was thinking he looked abit shady to

  • @marstondavis
    @marstondavis 4 года назад

    Schlieren. Just another German word for 'fookin-boring'.

    • @davidb6576
      @davidb6576 4 года назад +3

      American for 'fookin-boring' is 'Marston Davis'.

    • @cowboybob7093
      @cowboybob7093 4 года назад +1

      @@davidb6576 His personality has refined to where one's first impression of him is repellent.