grumpy_o_g
Well-Known Member
True. but it's that little bit that little bit that points forward (if you're not too close to the wind) which matters.
Groan. Fundamental physics. If you don't change the momentum of the wind, then no force is acting. The trick is to change the momentum (direction in this case, rather than speed) by only a small amount. From (say) 45 degrees off the centreline to (say) 25 degrees off the centreline.
This is much to the chagrin of the guy receiving your dirty wind, who now has to pay off 20 degrees because of the wind shift you've created.
Now whether you use a bit of cloth to do this, or a jet engine (OP at work here!), or a big propeller in the air, really doesn't matter.
The problem I have with people talking about momentum when it comes to aerofoils is that it implies that the air is colliding with the sails and imparting momentum in that way. Downwind that's true but then the sail is not acting as an aerofoil. I'm sure you know that only too well but it's a little misleading if someone doesn't understand the physics behind it. On a close reach the majority of the force (though not by any means all) is due to the pressure differential between the upper and lower surfaces. The dirty wind is purely a side effect. If you change the velocity of any anything with mass you change it's momentum but the change in direction of the airflow is much more complex than a linear relationship with lift produced.
In the fact the component of the force acting on the sails that is due to pressure difference is produced at a molecular level and has no direct relevance to the momentum of the airflow (though there's an indirect relationship obviously). I'm not sure if you're posting tongue in cheek but it's speed of the airflow that is critical - the whole point of changing the direction of the airflow with the curved sail is to create a situation whereby the airflow will accelerate and therefore crate a low pressure area as per Bernoulli. If the airflow is at any direction other than parallel to the sail's surface you're seeing a significant drop in the performance of the sail.