Traveling by airplane is
fast, but traveling by supersonic jet is faster. The trouble is that pesky
sonic boom caused by breaking the sound barrier, rattling windows and -- if
you're a military pilot -- alerting potential enemies of your presence during
low flights.
But a joint program between
NASA, the military and the aerospace industry is working to take the 'boom' out
of sonic booms by changing the shape of supersonic aircraft. The program may
lead not only to better military jets, but also to another age of commercial
air travel at faster than the speed of sound.
"For the commercial
industry, this is really huge," said Ed Haering, principle investigator of
NASA's sonic boom research at Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC) at Edwards
Air Force Base, California. "Right now you cannot fly commercial
supersonic aircraft over land."
That's largely due to
regulations set by the Federal Aviation Administration to curtail the effects
of supersonic flight on humans and the environment.
"What we want is a
supersonic cruise technology demonstrator that could become a business jet or a
global strike system," said Charles Boccadero, manager of Long Range
Strike Systems at Northrop Grumman Corp., which also worked on the sonic boom
suppression project. "It's an area that offers three times the speed that
you're traveling today at efficiency levels that are unprecedented."
While supersonic aircraft
have been military workhorses since Chuck Yeager's historic faster-than-sound
flight in 1947, there were only passenger supersonic airplanes. The Tu-144,
built in the former Soviet Union by aircraft manufacturer Tupolev, made its
last commercial passenger flight in June 1978.The Concorde, a joint
British-French endeavor, shut down in 2003 due to rising maintenance costs and
a slide in passenger revenue.
Shaping a sonic boom
Researchers drastically
reduced the sonic booms produced a U.S. Navy jet by giving it a nose job.
Under the Shaped Sonic Boom
Demonstration program sponsored by Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA), NASA and Northrop Grumman, researchers tacked on custom nose-glove on
the front of Navy F-5E jet as well as an aluminum substructure.
The thunderous booms heard
by humans when a vehicle flies overhead at speeds faster than the speed of
sound -- about 758 miles (1,220 kilometers) an hour at sea level. The culprit
is a change in air pressure -- about the same experienced by humans climbing a
few floors of stairs, but much faster -- which makes the sounds audible.
The added volume on the
modified F-5E, however, allowed researchers to better distribute the air
pressure build-up in front of a supersonic plane, which shapes how the pressure
is later released in a sonic boom shockwave as the aircraft breaks the sound
barrier. Modifying that pressure release meant softer sonic booms.
"Frankly, I think this
is going to usher in a new era of aviation," Boccadero told SPACE.com.
Haering said the
modifications eliminated about a third of the pressure typically released by
unmodified supersonic aircraft, a noticeable difference when the F-5E boom was
followed 45 seconds later by one from an unmodified aircraft.
Dryden researchers made
1,300 high-quality recordings of sonic booms during a series of January flights
and used other NASA aircraft to take observations within a boom's shockwave.
The end result was the largest set of sonic boom data collected in 20 years,
including information on different Mach speeds and in different weather.
"We're really just
drowning in data," Haering said.
A new plane
The Dryden-shaped sonic
boom flights were confined to an existing airplane that had already undergone
modifications to reduce boom noise. But in order to tailor an aircraft to run
as supersonic silent as possible, project researchers will ultimately have to
build a prototype from the ground up.
But first, researchers need
a new plane.
The F-5E test plane used by
NASA and Northrop Grumman was returned to the U.S. Navy and won't fly again for
research. Dryden does have a stable of aircraft that could be used for the
project.
"We're going to take
more incremental steps," Haering said. "Typically, new prototype
planes are hundreds of millions of dollarswe're going to have to make a case
for that demonstrator."
Instead of spending
hundreds of millions of dollars on a completely new vehicle right away, the
NASA program will look at other ways to shape a sonic boom. Modifications to a
supersonic aircraft's engine inlets and lift surfaces, for example, could also
help shape the sonic boom it creates.
"I think the next step
is to [eventually] build an entire vehicle made for low sonic booms to show how
quiet it can be," Haering said. "And then you can solicit the FAA for
rule changes."