jmalbright
Aerospace
- Sep 26, 2013
- 4
I have a UG model of a nacelle that icing tests are being performed on. The surface temperature of the nacelle is being monitored by IR cameras. If the incidence angle at which the camera hits the surface of the nacelle exceeds a certain value (say 50 degrees) then the camera reading will be inaccurate. So I have been tasked to find the portions of the nacelle where the incidence angle with the IR camera are greater than 50 degrees.
The incidence angle is calculated by drawing a line from the camera center (known point) to some arbitrary point on the nacelle surface. From that point on the nacelle surface another line that is normal to the surface is drawn. The incidence angle is the angle between those two lines.
Now this is obviously a calculation I can do manually for a bunch of different points, but it becomes tedious very fast when attempting to isolate all surfaces that have an incidence angle greater than 50 degrees. So I was wondering if it is possible to do this in some sort of an automated fashion that would allow me to isolate/extract the surfaces that have an incidence angle greater than 50 degrees.
Thank you for your help!
The incidence angle is calculated by drawing a line from the camera center (known point) to some arbitrary point on the nacelle surface. From that point on the nacelle surface another line that is normal to the surface is drawn. The incidence angle is the angle between those two lines.
Now this is obviously a calculation I can do manually for a bunch of different points, but it becomes tedious very fast when attempting to isolate all surfaces that have an incidence angle greater than 50 degrees. So I was wondering if it is possible to do this in some sort of an automated fashion that would allow me to isolate/extract the surfaces that have an incidence angle greater than 50 degrees.
Thank you for your help!