Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/03/29/nasa_scramjet_hits_mach/
NASA scramjet hits Mach 7
First successful flight of 'airframe integrated' device
Posted in Science, 29th March 2004 11:14 GMT
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NASA scientists are delighted - and doubtless relieved - at the successful launch and testing (http://space.com/missionlaunches/x43_launch_040327.html) of their X-43A scramjet vehicle (http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/Newsroom/ResearchUpdate/X43A/index.html) on Saturday.
The X-43A and its Pegasus booster rocket were released from a B-52 at 40,000ft. The booster carried the rocket to 95,000ft and, after successful separation of the two, the scramjet operated independently for over 15 miles at speeds around Mach 7 (c.5,000mph).
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Larry Huebner, scramjet propulsion research engineer on NASA's Hyper-X program (http://spacelink.nasa.gov/NASA.Projects/Aerospace.Technology/Research.Aircraft/Hyper-X/), said the scramjet experienced "positive acceleration" during its short flight. "Our vehicle under airbreathing power went over 15 miles," he enthused. "The flight today was the first-ever airframe integrated scramjet engine experiment. We can claim an air-breathing powered record today... no doubt about it."
Huebner's reference to the "first-ever airframe integrated scramjet" is certainly a nod to the Australian team who in 2002 fired up its own rocket-propelled HyShot scramjet (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2160502.stm). That had no integrated vehicle, but hit around Mach 7.6 with its projectile host's assistance. The HyShot site notes (http://www.mech.uq.edu.au/hyper/hyshot/) that: "Supersonic combustion was achieved on the second flight".
Which is what it's all about. To qualify for the title, a successful scramjet must mix atmospheric air with hydrogen and ignite it while flow throughout the engine remains at supersonic speeds.
The advantages of the technology are clear: the scramjet contains relatively few moving parts compared to a conventional turbine jet engine. NASA hopes that hypersonic passenger transports will be one benefit of the technology.
However, the scramjet may still have some way to go before becoming a viable transportation technology. NASA's success on Saturday comes almost three years after the X-43A's first flight ended in self-destruction (http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/archive/19411.html) provoked by a booster rocket malfunction. ®
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