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This New Boom-less Supersonic Jet Could Hit the Skies Soon

by multimill
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In the last two days, NASA’s experimental supersonic aircraft, the X-59 QueSST (Quiet SuperSonic Technology), has moved a step closer to its first flight.

The “quiet” supersonic X-59 is now on the flight line, the area between the hangar and runway, according to images released by NASA.

Before flight, the team will need to conduct ground tests, including engine runs and taxi tests, to make sure it is safe for flight. NASA hasn’t released a timeline for the first flight.

NASA X59 Experimental Supersonic Aircraft Using Quiet Technology to do away with sonic booms.

The X-59 QueSST has left its hangar for the first time in preparation for ground testing.

NASA

The X-59 has been in construction for more than two years. Its goal is to be able to fly supersonic, or faster than Mach 1 (767.2 mph), while reducing the sonic booms that defined previous supersonic aircraft like the Concorde, to a quiet thump.

NASA plans to fly the aircraft over communities to gather responses from people on the ground about the sounds generated during supersonic flight. The long-term goal is to gauge public response and present that data to regulators, possibly opening the way to commercial supersonic flight for aircraft like Boom’s Overture, which claims its design will mitigate sonic booms. The US government banned supersonic flight for all civilian aircraft over land in 1973.  

NASA X59 Experimental Supersonic Aircraft Using Quiet Technology to do away with sonic booms.

The aircraft was completed at Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works facility in California.

NASA

“It’s a rule that many people today aren’t aware of, yet it’s at the heart of what our Quesst mission is all about,” said Peter Coen, NASA’s Quesst mission integration manager in a statement. “We’re definitely ready to write a new chapter in the history of supersonic flight, making air travel over land twice as fast, but in a way that is safe, sustainable, and so much quieter than before.”

The single-seat X-59 has a length of just under 100 feet, with a hard-swept wingspan of 29.5 feet and height of just 14 feet. It will be able to cruise at 55,000 feet with a cruising speed of mach 1.4, or 925 mph.

NASA X59 Experimental Supersonic Aircraft Using Quiet Technology to do away with sonic booms.

The rendering shows the aircraft flying over land, emitting thuds rather than supersonic booms.

NASA

The X-59 is much smaller and slower than the Concorde. The 100-passenger craft cruised at 60,000 feet and a speed of Mach 2, or around 1,350 mph. It operated between 1976 and 2003.

If the X-59 is successful, and its soft thump convinces regulators to at least modify the ban on supersonic aircraft, the result could be a new generation of supersonic aircraft, which Boom and others are now attempting to build.



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