parafoil

{{Short description|Nonrigid airfoil with aerodynamic cell structure}}

Image:Jalbert2 01.jpgImage:X-38 Ship -2 Landing on Lakebed EC99-45080-101-EDIT1.jpg prototype makes a gentle lakebed landing at the end of a July 1999 test flight at the Dryden Flight Research Center.]]

A parafoil is a nonrigid (textile) airfoil with an aerodynamic cell structure which is inflated by the wind. Ram-air inflation forces the parafoil into a classic wing cross-section. Parafoils are most commonly constructed out of ripstop nylon.

The device was developed in 1964 by Domina Jalbert (1904–1991). Jalbert had a history of designing kites and was involved in the development of hybrid balloon-kite aerial platforms for carrying scientific instruments. He envisaged the parafoil would be used to suspend an aerial platform or for the recovery of space equipment. A patent was granted in 1966.{{cite patent |country=US |number=3285546 |status=patent}}

Deployment shock prevented the parafoil's immediate acceptance as a parachute. It was not until the addition of a drag canopy on the riser lines (known as a "slider") which slowed their spread that the parafoil became a suitable parachute. Compared to a simple round canopy, a parafoil parachute has greater steerability, will glide further and allows greater control of the rate of descent; the parachute format is mechanically a glider of the free-flight kite type and such aspects spawned paraglider use.{{cite web |url=https://www.faa.gov/sites/faa.gov/files/regulations_policies/handbooks_manuals/aviation/powered_parachute_handbook.pdf |title=Powered Parachute Flying Handbook |author= |date=2007 |website=Federal Aviation Administration |access-date=2020-08-16 |quote=History of the Powered Parachute, Powered Parachute Terms, Aerodynamics Summary, etc.}}

The air flow into the parafoil is coming more from below than the flight path might suggest, so the frontmost ropes tow against the airflow. When gliding, the angle of attack is lowered and the airflow meets the parafoil head on. This makes it difficult to achieve an optimum gliding angle without the parafoil deflating.

In 2019 Jalbert was awarded posthumously the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) Gold Parachuting Medal for inventing the parafoil.{{cite web |url=https://www.fai.org/news/domina-jalbert-awarded-fai-gold-air-medal |title=Domina Jalbert Awarded FAI Gold Air Medal For The Invention of the Multi-Cell Ram-Air Wing |date=2020-09-08 |access-date=2020-08-16 |website=Fédération Aéronautique Internationale / World Air Sports Federation}}

Parafoils see wide use in a variety of windsports such as kite flying, powered parachutes, paragliding, kitesurfing, speed flying, wingsuit flying and skydiving.{{cite web |url=http://kite.org/education/styles/single-line/parafoil-kites/ |title=Parafoil Kites |website=American Kitefliers Association |access-date=2020-08-16 }}{{cite web |title=Squirrel Aura Wingsuit |url=http://squirrel.ws/wingsuits/aura3 |accessdate=11 May 2017}}{{cite web |url=http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=737 |title=NASA X-38 Team Flies Largest Parafoil Parachute in History |website=Space Ref |date=2000-02-04 |access-date=2020-08-16 }} The world's largest kite is a parafoil-variant.{{cite web |url=https://kitelife.com/2009/02/01/issue-64-guinness-record-worlds-largest-kite/ |title=Issue 64: Guinness Record for World's Largest Kite |author=Meg Robinson-Albers |date=2009-02-01 |website=KiteLife |access-date=2020-08-16}}

Today, SpaceX uses steerable Parafoils to recover the fairings of their Falcon 9 rocket.

Patents

  • {{US patent|3285546}} Multi-cell wing type aerial device, filed October 1964, issued November 1966

See also

References