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I have circled the areas (in yellow) under the belly of the 737.

What exactly are those?

enter image description here
(airliners.net)

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    $\begingroup$ The What is: NACA duct. I'm not sure of its purpose other than to ingest air with the least possible disruption of outside airflow. $\endgroup$
    – FreeMan
    Jul 3, 2015 at 14:39

2 Answers 2

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That's an air inlet -- technically a "Ram Air" inlet -- for the air conditioning packs. There is a "left" and "right" pack, which supply air to the forward and aft part of the aircraft respectively (although either pack can supply enough air to keep the aircraft pressurized to its max altitude). They use high temperature/high pressure bleed air from the engines or APU, but they also get airflow from the ambient air which is used to cool the bleed air. The inlet noted in the question is where the ambient air enters, and there are exhaust vents for this air on the bottom of the aircraft. THIS air isn't used for the pressurization per se (i.e. it doesn't enter the cabin), but just for cooling the air that will enter the cabin (which came from the compressor in the engines/APU, upstream of the combustion chamber).

On the ground, there are louvers that close to keep water and debris out of these ducts, and fans are used to pull in air in that configuration. In-flight, the louvers open and airflow is generally sufficient to move the air through the system (although the fans still provide some assist).

While there is some amount of drag here, it's fairly minimal, and the ability to keep the cabin pressurized and cool is sufficiently important that the little bit of drag that's caused here is considered acceptable.

Close-up photo of the inlet door (Next-Gen 737):

Inlet Door - Next Gen 737

Close-up photo of the inlet door (Classic 737):

Inlet Door - Classic 737

Photo of exhaust louvers: enter image description here source page for all of the above (with technical discussion of the air conditioning & pressurization system): http://www.b737.org.uk/airconditioning.htm

Even more technical description of the system -- text & schematics but no photos

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    $\begingroup$ Funny how the brain can fill in blanks that don't exist. I read that as a photo of the exhaust lovers. Mind you, I do feel odd in loving the smell of burnt AvTur. $\endgroup$
    – Simon
    Jul 3, 2015 at 17:41
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This specific inlet type is called a "NACA inlet", "NACA scoop" or "NACA duct", since it had been invented by Francis Melvin Rogallo at NACA in 1941 (PDF) and refined by scientists at NACA (now NASA) Ames. Its main advantage is its simplicity: It just needs a properly shaped cutout in the skin and a rounded rear edge, whereas the airscoops it replaces need carefully shaped contours.

The working principle is quite similar to that of a delta wing, only in this case the actual wing is missing, and is surrounded by sheet metal. But like on the swept leading edge of a delta wing, the swept left and right edges create a vortex which is swallowed by the actual intake at the rear of the cutout. This helps to create a lot of flow for the given area, even though efficiency is below that of a well-shaped airscoop.

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