DailyDirt: Supersonic Flights
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Remember the Concorde? It was the longest operating commercial supersonic aircraft that flew its last flight in 2003 after 27 years of service. With a cruising speed of 1,350 mph (Mach 2), the Concorde could fly from New York to London in under 3 hours. For more than 20 years, the Concorde was the fastest and safest airliner in the world, but a deadly crash in 2000 that killed all 109 people on board, as well as 4 people on the ground, precipitated the demise of the Concorde, which was already suffering from a general downturn in the aviation industry. There hasn't been a successor to the Concorde since it was retired, but perhaps the following are some possibilities.- Apparently, a secret team of Boeing engineers is still working on the Sonic Cruiser, which was cancelled and replaced by the 787 Dreamliner. Technically, the Sonic Cruiser isn't supersonic, since it's designed to fly at 0.98 Mach, but its design has changed a bit since the original was proposed. The engines, which would have F-35 like variable geometry chevrons, are now located over (rather than embedded in) the wings, which now also have vertical stabilizers. [url]
- The X-51A WaveRider "Scramjet," an unmanned hypersonic aircraft, successfully reached Mach 5.1 in its final test flight. It traveled 230 nautical miles in just over 6 minutes and was the longest air-breathing hypersonic flight ever. The X-51A is unique in that it uses a hydrocarbon (rather than hydrogen) fuel in its supersonic combustion engine.[url]
- Why isn't there a successor to the Concorde? Perhaps it's because we're too cheap to fly faster. In fact, we're actually flying slower today than we were 50 years ago. In 1958, airliners were traveling at cruising speeds of just over 600 mph, compared to today's more fuel efficient 550 mph.[url]
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Filed Under: aircraft, airline, aviation, concorde, dreamliner, flying, jet, mach, plane, scramjet, sonic cruiser, supersonic
Companies: boeing
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I know this is a bit off topic but...
Remember yesterday how people were saying that it wouldn't be possible to mine asteroids because the rocket fuel costs would be to high?
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/image_feature_2416.html#.UhU_yZLrwSl
Nasa already has you covered.
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Teleportation
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Re: Teleportation
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The shortest route from NYC to Tokyo, for example, is about 11,000 km (mostly overland; a supersonic route would be longer). A Concorde ran at about 2100 kph. So that's 5 hours 15 minutes if it was supersonic on that shortest route. If you leave at noon in NYC, you'd arrive at 5:15pm Eastern, but 6:15am Tokyo time. You'll want to go to bed by the time your lunch meeting comes along. That's not so good, given how pricey it'll be.
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Was Concorde Technically “Commercial”?
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Re: Teleportation
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Maybe that's why they call it the SONIC Cruiser? Maybe? Perhaps?
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TSA Delays
A morning meeting in Tokyo on New york time on no notice is quite do-able by an energetic businessman.
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supersonic flight/economics
I remember before the first oil embargo, when jets taking off stood on their tails to get to altitude ASAP, but you don't see that anymore!
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sonic Cruiser
to come up with a more economical plane that would have
some of the Sonic Cruiser features; i.e., more speed, less fuel. The USA is losing its leadership role in aviation
and for the all the money that this country wastes on wars
to "protect democracy & human rights' in countries where
the Man with the biggest Club wins, we should use it to advance our own industrial base. Our ideal partner should
be Japan; NOBODY else! We need jobs in USA, not countries
that are steeped in corruption. BOEING knows me as "Smoke Screen".
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