The Whitcomb area rule, named after
NACA engineer
Richard Whitcomb and also called the transonic area rule, is a design procedure used to reduce an
aircraft
An aircraft ( aircraft) is a vehicle that is able to flight, fly by gaining support from the Atmosphere of Earth, air. It counters the force of gravity by using either Buoyancy, static lift or the Lift (force), dynamic lift of an airfoil, or, i ...
's
drag at
transonic speeds which occur between about
Mach
The Mach number (M or Ma), often only Mach, (; ) is a dimensionless quantity in fluid dynamics representing the ratio of flow velocity past a Boundary (thermodynamic), boundary to the local speed of sound.
It is named after the Austrian physi ...
0.75 and 1.2. For supersonic speeds a different procedure called the supersonic area rule, developed by NACA aerodynamicist
Robert Jones, is used.
Transonic is one of the most important speed ranges for commercial and military
fixed-wing aircraft today, with transonic acceleration an important performance requirement for combat aircraft and which is improved by reductions in transonic drag.
Description
At high-subsonic flight speeds, the local speed of the airflow can reach the speed of sound where the flow accelerates around the
aircraft
An aircraft ( aircraft) is a vehicle that is able to flight, fly by gaining support from the Atmosphere of Earth, air. It counters the force of gravity by using either Buoyancy, static lift or the Lift (force), dynamic lift of an airfoil, or, i ...
body and
wing
A wing is a type of fin that produces both Lift (force), lift and drag while moving through air. Wings are defined by two shape characteristics, an airfoil section and a planform (aeronautics), planform. Wing efficiency is expressed as lift-to-d ...
s. The speed at which this development occurs varies from aircraft to aircraft and is known as the
critical Mach number. The resulting
shock wave
In physics, a shock wave (also spelled shockwave), or shock, is a type of propagating disturbance that moves faster than the local speed of sound in the medium. Like an ordinary wave, a shock wave carries energy and can propagate through a me ...
s formed at these zones of sonic flow cause a sudden increase in
drag, called
wave drag. To reduce the number and strength of these shock waves, an
aerodynamic
Aerodynamics () is the study of the motion of atmosphere of Earth, air, particularly when affected by a solid object, such as an airplane wing. It involves topics covered in the field of fluid dynamics and its subfield of gas dynamics, and is an ...
shape should change in
cross sectional area as smoothly as possible from front to rear.
Transonic area rule
The area rule says that two airplanes with the same longitudinal cross-sectional area distribution have the same wave drag, independent of how the area is distributed laterally (i.e. in the fuselage or in the wing). Furthermore, to avoid the formation of strong shock waves the external shape of the aircraft has to be carefully arranged so that the cross-sectional area changes as smoothly as possible going from nose to tail. At the location of the wing, the fuselage is narrowed or "waisted". Fuselage cross-sectional area may need to be reduced by flattening the sides of the fuselage below a bubble canopy and at the tail surfaces to compensate for their presence, both of which were done on the
Hawker Siddeley Buccaneer.
Supersonic area rule
A different area rule, known as the supersonic area rule, developed by NACA aerodynamicist Robert Jones in "Theory of wing-body drag at supersonic speeds",
is applicable at speeds beyond transonic, and in this case, the cross-sectional area requirement is established with relation to the angle of the Mach cone for the design speed. For example, consider that at Mach 1.3 the angle of the Mach cone generated by the nose of the aircraft will be at an angle μ = arcsin(1/M) = 50.3° (where μ is the angle of the Mach cone, also known as
Mach angle, and M is the
Mach number). In this case the "perfect shape" is biased rearward; therefore, aircraft designed for lower wave drag at supersonic speed usually have wings towards the rear.
[.]
Sears–Haack body
A superficially related concept is the
Sears–Haack body, the shape of which allows minimum wave drag for a given length and a given volume. However, the Sears–Haack body shape is derived starting with the
Prandtl–Glauert equation which approximately governs small-disturbance subsonic flows, as well as Ackeret Theory, which closely describes supersonic flow. Both methods lose validity for transonic flows where the area rule applies, due to assumptions made in their derivations. So although the Sears–Haack body shape, being smooth, will have favorable wave drag properties according to the area rule, it is not theoretically optimum.
History
Germany

The area rule was discovered by when comparing a swept wing with a w-wing with extreme high wave drag while working on a transonic wind tunnel at
Junkers
Junkers Flugzeug- und Motorenwerke AG (JFM, earlier JCO or JKO in World War I, English language, English: Junkers Aircraft and Motor Works) more commonly Junkers , was a major German aircraft manufacturer, aircraft and aircraft engine manufactu ...
works in Germany between 1943 and 1945. He wrote a description on 17 December 1943, with the title ''Anordnung von Verdrängungskörpern beim Hochgeschwindigkeitsflug'' ("Arrangement of Displacement Bodies in High-Speed Flight"); this was used in a patent filed in 1944. The results of this research were presented to a wide circle in March 1944 by Theodor Zobel at the ''Deutsche Akademie der Luftfahrtforschung'' (German Academy of Aeronautics Research) in the lecture "Fundamentally new ways to increase performance of high speed aircraft."
Subsequent German wartime aircraft design took account of the discovery, evident in slim mid-fuselage of aircraft including the
Messerschmitt P.1112
The Messerschmitt P.1112 was a proposed Germany, German jet fighter, developed by Messerschmitt AG during the closing stages of World War II, and intended for use by the Luftwaffe. The progress of the war prevented the completion of a prototype ...
,
P.1106 and
Focke-Wulf 1000x1000x1000 type A long-range bomber, but also apparent in delta wing designs including the
Henschel Hs 135. Several other researchers came close to developing a similar theory, notably
Dietrich Küchemann who designed a tapered fighter that was dubbed the "Küchemann Coke Bottle" when it was discovered by US forces in 1946. In this case Küchemann arrived at the theory by studying airflow, notably the interference, or local flow streamlines, at the junction between a fuselage and
swept wing. The fuselage was contoured, or waisted, to match the flow. The shaping requirement of this "near field" approach would also result from Whitcomb's later "far field" approach to drag reduction using his Sonic area rule.
United States
Wallace D. Hayes, a pioneer of
supersonic flight, developed the transonic area rule in publications beginning in 1947 with his Ph.D. thesis at the
California Institute of Technology.
[.]
Richard T. Whitcomb, after whom the rule is named, independently discovered this rule in 1952, while working at the
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics
The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) was a United States federal agency that was founded on March 3, 1915, to undertake, promote, and institutionalize aeronautical research. On October 1, 1958, the agency was dissolved and its ...
(NACA). While using the new Eight-Foot High-Speed Tunnel, a
wind tunnel
A wind tunnel is "an apparatus for producing a controlled stream of air for conducting aerodynamic experiments". The experiment is conducted in the test section of the wind tunnel and a complete tunnel configuration includes air ducting to and f ...
with performance up to Mach 0.95 at NACA's
Langley Research Center, he was surprised by the increase in drag due to shock wave formation. Whitcomb realized that, for analytical purposes, an airplane could be reduced to a streamlined body of revolution, elongated as much as possible to mitigate abrupt discontinuities and, hence, equally abrupt drag rise.
The shocks could be seen using
Schlieren photography, but the reason they were being created at speeds far below the speed of sound, sometimes as low as Mach 0.70, remained a mystery.
In late 1951, the lab hosted a talk by
Adolf Busemann, a famous German aerodynamicist who had moved to Langley after
World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
. He talked about the behavior of airflow around an airplane as its speed approached the critical Mach number, when air no longer behaved as an incompressible fluid. Whereas engineers were used to thinking of air flowing smoothly around the body of the aircraft, at high speeds it simply did not have time to "get out of the way", and instead started to flow as if it were rigid pipes of flow, a concept Busemann referred to as "streampipes", as opposed to
streamlines, and jokingly suggested that engineers had to consider themselves "pipefitters".
Several days later Whitcomb had a "
Eureka" moment. The reason for the high drag was that the "pipes" of air were interfering with each other in three dimensions. One does not simply consider the air flowing over a 2D cross-section of the aircraft as others could in the past; now they also had to consider the air to the "sides" of the aircraft which would also interact with these streampipes. Whitcomb realized that the shaping had to apply to the aircraft ''as a whole'', rather than just to the fuselage. That meant that the extra cross-sectional area of the wings and tail had to be accounted for in the overall shaping, and that the fuselage should actually be narrowed where they meet to more closely match the ideal.
Applications
The first aircraft where the area rule was consequently implemented was the German bomber
testbed Junkers Ju-287 (1944). Other corresponding German designs were not completed due to the end of the war or even remained in the planning stage.
When the area rule was re-discovered by Whitcomb, it was made available to the U.S. aircraft industry on a secret basis for military programs from 1952 and it was reported in 1957 for civilian programs.
Convair and Grumman, with Whitcomb's help, used it concurrently to design the
Grumman F-11 Tiger and to redesign the
Convair F-102.
The
Grumman F-11 Tiger was the first of the two aircraft to fly and had been designed using the area rule from the outset. The Convair
F-102 Delta Dagger had to be redesigned as it had been unable to reach Mach 1 although its design speed was Mach 1.2. The expectation that it would reach design speed had been based on optimistic wind-tunnel drag predictions. Modifications which included indenting the fuselage beside the wings and adding more volume to the rear of the aircraft, reduced the transonic drag significantly and the Mach 1.2 design speed was reached. The reason for using the area rule on these fighter aircraft was to reduce the peak value of the drag which occurs at Mach 1 and so enable supersonic speeds with less thrust than would otherwise have been necessary.
In 1957 a modified area rule was available for raising the subsonic cruise speed of transport aircraft by 50 mph.
The cruise speed is limited by the sudden increase in drag which indicates the presence of local supersonic flow on top of the wing. Whitcomb's modified rule reduced the supersonic speed before the shock, which weakened it and reduced the drag associated with it. The
Convair 990 had bumps called
antishock bodies added to the top surface of the wing with the intent of achieving the required cruise speed. However, the area distribution in the channels formed by the nacelle/pylon/wing surfaces also caused supersonic velocities and was the source of significant drag. An area-rule technique, so-called channel area-ruling, was applied to achieve the required cruise speed.
Designers at
Armstrong-Whitworth took the sonic area rule a step further in their proposed M-Wing, in which the wing was first swept forward and then to the rear. This allowed the fuselage to be narrowed in front of the root as well as behind it, leading to a smoother fuselage that remained wider on average than one using a classic swept wing.
The extension behind the flight deck on the
Rockwell B-1 Lancer and
Boeing 747
The Boeing 747 is a long-range wide-body aircraft, wide-body airliner designed and manufactured by Boeing Commercial Airplanes in the United States between 1968 and 2023.
After the introduction of the Boeing 707, 707 in October 1958, Pan Am ...
was added to improve the cross-sectional area distribution according to the area rule.
Aircraft designed according to Whitcomb's area rule (such as the
F-102 Delta Dagger and the
Northrop F-5) looked odd when they first appeared and were sometimes dubbed "flying
Coke bottles", but this became an expected part of the appearance of some transonic aircraft. Visually-apparent indications that the area rule has defined the shape of an aircraft are fuselage "waisting" and tip-tank shaping as on the
Northrop F-5, and rear fuselage thinning on business jets with rear engines such as the
Bombardier Global Express. The rule also requires careful positioning of parts, like the boosters and cargo bay on rockets and the shape and location of the canopy on the
F-22 Raptor.
The supersonic area rule was applied, at Mach 2, to the prototype
Concorde. The rear fuselage was extended by 3.73m on the production aircraft and reduced wave drag by 1.8%.
[A Case Study By Aerospatiale And British Aerospace On The Concorde By Jean Rech and Clive S. Leyman, AIAA Professional Study Series, Fig. 3.6]
Images
Image:Eclipse_program_QF-106_aircraft_in_flight,_view_from_tanker.jpg, The F-106 Delta Dart, a development of the F-102 Delta Dagger, shows the "wasp-waisted" shaping due to area rule considerations
Image:Convair 990 on ramp EC92-05275-30.jpg, NASA Convair 990 with antishock bodies on the rear of the wings
Image:Antishock_Bodies_Visualization.jpg, Oilflow visualization of flow separation without and with antishock bodies
File:J-3005.jpg, Northrop F-5 showing fuselage waisting
File:IIAF F-5A 3-417.jpg, Northrop F-5 showing tip-tank shaping
File:Bombardier Global Express 91.jpg, Bombardier Global Express showing rear fuselage thinning between engines
File:Concorde first visit Heathrow Fitzgerald.jpg, Prototype Concorde before tail was modified using Mach 2 application of area rule
File:Aerospatial Concorde (6018513515).jpg, Production Concorde with area ruled tail
See also
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Anti-shock body
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Coke bottle styling
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Sonic boom
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Sound barrier
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Supersonic aerodynamics
Notes
Bibliography
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External links
Area rule explained Aerospace Web.
Whitcomb Area Rule and Küchemann Carrots Aerospace Web.
DGLR document
German patent search system– look for Patent DE 932410 filed March 21, 1944.
NASA
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ttps://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/concorde/shock.html See Image 4 for an extreme example: fuselage before wing PBS.
The Whitcomb Area Rule: NACA Aerodynamics Research and Innovation History Nasa.
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Flight global archives
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