Experiments were conducted to examine rotor tip vortex interactions wi
th a body in low-speed forward flight. Unsteady pressure measurements
were made at points along the top and around the circumference of the
body surface. Flow visualization of the rotor wake was performed using
the wide-field shadowgraph method. Considerable insight into the tip
vortex interaction processes was obtained by correlating the pressure
loads with the vortex trajectories as they approached, distorted, and
impinged on the body surface. Unsteady potential flow theory was explo
red as a means of predicting the unsteady pressure loads on the body s
urface, using prescribed tip vortex trajectories measured from now vis
ualization. The results have shown that the process of tip vortex inte
raction with a body can be divided into three regimes: 1) close tip vo
rtex/body interactions, which is an inviscid flow regime; 2) vortex/su
rface impingement; and 3) postvortex/surface impingement; the latter i
nvolves viscous effects. The results have also shown that the pressure
s at points on the body exhibited a high sensitivity to tip vortex con
vection speed and location, which makes the general prediction of such
interactional phenomena difficult with existing rotor/airframe intera
ction models.