That's what I've been thinking for a good while now, surely they have built a few prototypes and tried a bit of wheel to wheel racing to confirm whether racing will be better or not?
That's what I've been thinking for a good while now, surely they have built a few prototypes and tried a bit of wheel to wheel racing to confirm whether racing will be better or not?
Digital Particle Image Velocimetry, perhaps. Tiny particles are added to the airflow and a laser sheet scans the volume. Using cameras and computers, the motion of the particles can be tracked and a model of complex flows built up. The particles are small enough that they don't mess with the flow, and the laser/camera tracking system doesn't interact with the flow in any way either - unlike, for example, the traditional smoke lance would do. At least, that's my basic understanding of the technique.
yes, I thought of that one, but with the model so close to the road surface, will a laser be able to visualize?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Aug 2023, 11:54Digital Particle Image Velocimetry, perhaps. Tiny particles are added to the airflow and a laser sheet scans the volume. Using cameras and computers, the motion of the particles can be tracked and a model of complex flows built up. The particles are small enough that they don't mess with the flow, and the laser/camera tracking system doesn't interact with the flow in any way either - unlike, for example, the traditional smoke lance would do. At least, that's my basic understanding of the technique.
Laser sheet in from the side or even from within the model itself, carefully positioned cameras (behind the model). Should be possible.FW17 wrote: ↑23 Aug 2023, 14:23yes, I thought of that one, but with the model so close to the road surface, will a laser be able to visualize?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Aug 2023, 11:54Digital Particle Image Velocimetry, perhaps. Tiny particles are added to the airflow and a laser sheet scans the volume. Using cameras and computers, the motion of the particles can be tracked and a model of complex flows built up. The particles are small enough that they don't mess with the flow, and the laser/camera tracking system doesn't interact with the flow in any way either - unlike, for example, the traditional smoke lance would do. At least, that's my basic understanding of the technique.
https://cloudfront.jove.com/files/ftp_u ... 44fig1.jpg
Here's a review of PIV in F1 written by one of our writers: https://www.f1technical.net/features/15830FW17 wrote: ↑23 Aug 2023, 14:23yes, I thought of that one, but with the model so close to the road surface, will a laser be able to visualize?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Aug 2023, 11:54Digital Particle Image Velocimetry, perhaps. Tiny particles are added to the airflow and a laser sheet scans the volume. Using cameras and computers, the motion of the particles can be tracked and a model of complex flows built up. The particles are small enough that they don't mess with the flow, and the laser/camera tracking system doesn't interact with the flow in any way either - unlike, for example, the traditional smoke lance would do. At least, that's my basic understanding of the technique.
https://cloudfront.jove.com/files/ftp_u ... 44fig1.jpg