News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terrorunited-statesspace-and-tech-weapons — Viewing Item


Nasa scramjet soars almost 7000 mph

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://apnews.myway.com/article/20041117/D86DA1MG0.html

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20041117/D86DA1MG0.html

NASA 'Scramjet' Soars at Almost 7,000 Mph
Nov 16, 7:52 PM (ET)

By JOHN ANTCZAK


LOS ANGELES (AP) - A tiny unmanned NASA "scramjet" soared above the Pacific Ocean Tuesday at nearly 10 times the speed of sound, or almost 7,000 mph, in a successful demonstration of a radical new engine technology.

The 12-foot-long X-43A supersonic combustion ramjet reached about Mach 9.7, said Leslie Williams, a spokeswoman at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base.

The exotic aircraft was designed to fly under its own power for about 10 seconds after separating from a booster rocket at 110,000 feet, then glide to a splash landing.

Details of the craft's exact performance were to be announced later from Dryden, but mission officials were jubilant immediately after the brief flight.

"Once again we made aviation history. We did that in March when we went seven times the speed of sound and now we've done it right around 10 times the speed of sound," said Vince Rausch, Hyper-X program manager from NASA's Langley Research Center in Virginia.

The X-43A, mounted on a Pegasus rocket used to boost it to flight speed, was carried under the wing of a B-52 aircraft and released at an altitude of 40,000 feet over a test range off the Southern California coast. The rocket motor then fired for a 90-second ascent.

Like its predecessors, the X-43A will not be recovered from the ocean.

The flight was the last in a $230 million-plus effort to test technology most likely to be initially used in military aircraft, such as a bomber that could reach any target on Earth within two hours of takeoff from the United States, or to power missiles.

Scramjets may also provide an alternative to rockets for space launches.

Unlike conventional jet engines which use rotating fan blades to compress air for combustion, the X-43A has no rotating engine parts. Instead it uses the underside of the aircraft's forebody to "scoop" up and compress air for mixing with hydrogen fuel.

The X-43A launched Tuesday was the last of three built for NASA's Hyper-X program.

The first X-43A flight failed in 2001 when the booster rocket veered off course and was destroyed.

The second X-43A successfully flew in March, reaching Mach 6.83 - nearly 5,000 mph - and setting a world speed record for a plane powered by an air-breathing engine.

That was more than double the top speed of the jet-powered SR-71 Blackbird spyplane, which at slightly more than Mach 3 is the fastest air-breathing, manned aircraft.

The old X-15 was the fastest rocket-powered manned airplane, hitting Mach 6.7. Rockets do not "breathe" air, but instead carry oxidizers that are combined with fuel to allow combustion.

Not having to carry oxygen is one of the advantages scramjets hold over rockets. Rockets can also achieve high speeds, but the weight of oxygen tanks or other oxidizers reduces the amount of payload they can carry.

Tuesday's launch was expected to be the last research flight for NASA's B-52, which is being retired after some 40 years of service.

---

On the Net:

Dryden Flight Research Center: http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov

Langley Research Center: http://www.larc.nasa.gov




Air force wants bigger than moab { November 8 2004 }
Air force wants offensive space weapons { May 18 2005 }
Automated killer robots are threat to humanity { January 2008 }
Bush sets defense as space priority { October 18 2006 }
Congress backs pentagon budget heavy on future weaons { June 11 2004 }
Darpa hypersonic bomber { July 1 2003 }
Dolphins trained in attack and kill missions { September 25 2005 }
Israeli us laser downs long range missile in test
Laser beam weapon to be mounted on boeing
Laser beam weapons from space ready for battle
Military role in space set to expand { January 2006 }
Nasa scramjet soars almost 7000 mph
Nasa test of scramjet makes aviation history
New military bomb turns the enemy homosexual
New sonic weapon to iraq { March 9 2004 }
New weapon can shoot around corners { December 15 2003 }
Northrop grumman lasers to zap sams
Pentagon airborne laser weapon on schedule { March 22 2006 }
Pentagon envisioning costly internet world vision { November 13 2004 }
Pentagon project death ray bomb { August 14 2003 }
Pentagon sonic devices inflict pain deafness { March 7 2004 }
Pentagon to test space weapons { March 15 2006 }
Robocop army soldier closer to battlefield { February 16 2005 }
Robot legs [jpg]
Robot plane drops bomb in test
Robotic legs could produce super troops { March 10 2004 }
Russia urges us to avoid space arms race { May 19 2005 }
Scramjet propelled warfare to new era { March 29 2004 }
Segway human transporter robot killer
Us military takes step towards weapononizing space
US plans to build experiemental bomb { July 17 2004 }
Us secret gas { October 29 2002 }
US sends armed robots into iraq { July 2007 }
Us tests biggest bomb moab
US to defend space with military force { December 14 2006 }
Us wants space superiority { November 7 2004 }
Use of unmanned drones surges over iraq { July 5 2007 }

Files Listed: 37



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple