Hypersonic flight
Hypersonic flight is flight through the atmosphere below about 90km at speeds above Mach 5, a speed where dissociation of air begins to become significant and high heat loads exist.
History
The V-2 rocket, first used in World War II by Nazi Germany and later used by the United States in its early rocketry work, was the first manufactured object to achieve hypersonic flight. In February 1949, its upper stage reached a maximum speed of Mach 5 (5,150 miles per hour; 8,288 kilometers per hour). The vehicle, however, burned on atmospheric re-entry, and only charred remnants were found. In April 1961, Russian Major Yuri Gagarin became the first human to travel at hypersonic speed, during the world's first piloted orbital flight. Soon after, in May 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American and second person to achieve hypersonic flight when his capsule reentered the atmosphere at a speed above Mach 5 at the end of his suborbital flight over the Atlantic Ocean.
In November, 1961, Air Force Major Robert White flew the X-15 research airplane at speeds over Mach 6.[1][2]
Flown aircraft
Hypersonic aircraft
- X-15
- SpaceShipOne
- SpaceShipTwo
- Boeing X-43 (unmanned)
- Boeing X-51 (unmanned)
Spaceplanes
Cancelled aircraft
Hypersonic aircraft
Spaceplanes
- X-20 Dyna-Soar
- Rockwell X-30 (National Aerospace Plane)
- MiG-105 (Spiral)
- other spaceplane projects
Developing and proposed aircraft
Hypersonic aircraft
Cruise missiles and warheads
- Advanced Hypersonic Weapon
- WU-14
- Yu-71
- Hypersonic Technology Demonstrator Vehicle
- Cruise missile#Categories#Hypersonic
See also
- Hypersonic
- Supersonic transport
- Lifting body
- Atmospheric entry
- Boost-glide
- Scramjet
- List of X-planes
References
- ↑ White, Robert. "Across the Hypersonic Divide". HistoryNet. HistoryNet LLC. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
- ↑ "Hypersonic plane passes latest test - Just In - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". Abc.net.au. 2010-03-22. Retrieved 2014-02-18.
- ↑ D. Preller and P. M. Smart, "Abstract: SPARTAN: Scramjet Powered Accelerator for Reusable Technology AdvaNcement," 2014. http://rispace.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/33_preller.pdf