More On Silent Supersonic Planes 297
Reverberant writes "Popular Science describes the latest attempt at developing a supersonic plane designed to minimize sonic booms. The article describes some of the history behind the research, and recent attempts at validating the theory. Also note that researcher Ken Plotkin is a frequent contributer to alt.sci.physics.acoustics."
Sonic booms... (Score:5, Funny)
Towards A Silent Sonic Booms (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Towards A Silent Sonic Booms (Score:3, Funny)
All Your Booms are Belong to Us?
Re:Towards A Silent Sonic Booms (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Towards A Silent Sonic Booms (Score:4, Funny)
Sounds like what you do to be less anal retentive. Which, in a thread on nitpicking, is somehow fitting.
windows (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:windows (Score:4, Funny)
So? (Score:5, Insightful)
IFR (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So? (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry, but instruments can be much more accurate--but I would still want a window--despite how irrational it is!
Re:windows (Score:5, Informative)
A modern airliner with all the latest gadgets (GPS, EFIS, ILS) can be flown without any sort of external vision at all. Heck, the modern autopilots can take off, fly to the destination, fly the approach, and do all but about the last 50ft onto the runway.
Re:windows (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:windows (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:windows (Score:3)
Yeah, it's a nitpick, but so what?
Re:windows (Score:2)
it's a nitpick, and it matters.
Re:windows (Score:5, Interesting)
We pilots are there in case something goes wrong, and because ATC doesn't issue the exact same route every single time. Someone has to input the proper arrival procedure for the destination, since weather changes a LOT.
p
Fully automatic blind landing... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fully automatic blind landing... (Score:2)
p
Well... (Score:2)
Other conditions can contribute to being totally disoriented (like the cause of JFK Jr.'s crash). In his case, he wasn't authorized to fly at night due to the fact that he wasn't instrument-only rated.
Re:Well... (Score:3, Insightful)
A related side note: commercial pilots are required to have an instrument rating to fly for hire at night. This doesn't apply in this case because Kennedy wasn't flying for hire.
p
Re:windows (Score:4, Informative)
Re:windows (Score:2, Funny)
Re:windows (Score:5, Funny)
I can't, my scuba certification isn't current.
Re:windows (Score:2)
phew (Score:5, Funny)
It's about time! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's about time! (Score:3, Insightful)
That's not really true, it's just that most of the changes are more subtle than the flamboyant extravaganza that was Concorde. The newer planes are doing much the same job they did back in '99, but much more efficiently and safely. There's little "Gee Whiz" factor, but technology is sure marching on.
There's more than just technology involved too. I remember an article on Beyond 2000 about BMW's Hydrogen powered 7 series. The technology has been around for decades, but we don't have this stuff on the road d
Re:It's about time! (Score:2, Informative)
Maybe because it is already beyond 2000... They would have to rename the show Beyond 2010 or something...
"The english accents and the just-over-the-horizon tech was great stuff!"
Beyond 2000 was an Australian show, with Aussie presenters. Maybe you can't tell the difference between an Aussie accent and an english one, but they are quite different.
'Popular Science' (Score:4, Funny)
--
If you don't get it, don't moderate!
Typical filler in the article (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, on a serious note, I got pretty frustrated with the article. Actually, I only read the first page and then got bored. I'll never understand why science writers always clutter up their articles with crap like that turtle in the story. We want to read about advanced aerodynamics, not wildlife. Then they go on and on talking in detail about the test. Just tell us what happened at the test; we don't need a blow-by-blow account.
Extra clutter like that really makes the article seem amateurish. Yo
Re:Typical filler in the article (Score:3, Insightful)
As someone who reads journals all the time, I enjoy the breezy,
Re:Typical filler in the article (Score:3, Informative)
Newsflash: PM is not a scientific or engineering magazine, it's basically the nerdy guy/Redneck mechanic version of supermarket tabloids like News Of The World, or the Star. Try looking at some back issues and you'll figure out pretty soon that this rag is just recycling the same badly written, factually wrong and unrepentantly gush-y articles every year. (Oh, it's June--let's do the supersonic plane again. July--the Navy's next
Re:Typical filler in the article (Score:3, Informative)
PM was once a serious and useful publication, but that must have been more than 15 years ago.
Way more than that. As early as the late 60's (the oldest issues in my memory) PS was pretty much a gee-whiz magazine not intended for actual practitioners of science or engineering. But if you look at pre-WWII reprints, it has the flavor of a trade rag, with actual practical knowlege for projects (homebuilt radio sets were common, I think this was before a separate Popular Electronics) The premiere ussue was
Re:Typical filler in the article (Score:3, Interesting)
that's because the magazine is Popular Science, and not Hardcore, Adless, Emotionless & Subject-Verb-Object-Only-Sentences Science.
I'd like to know... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I'd like to know... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I'd like to know... (Score:2, Funny)
If I'm in the middle of the woods and cannot hear my wife, am I still wrong?
Re:Your response: (Score:2)
One would have thought the implied joke was the obvious part.
A picture of the modified plane... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A picture of the modified plane... (Score:3, Interesting)
Slashdot: Year-old News for Nerds
really a problem? (Score:3, Interesting)
Is that really a big problem? It seems kind of dumb to me to ban supersonic flight over cities.
EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom (Score:5, Interesting)
I've never heard a sonic boom... so I'm not really sure how loud they are, but a co-worker described it as "pretty much sounds like thunder".
EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom at one point: the crack of a whip. That sound you hear is not the tip of the whip hitting anything. It's the sound of the tip accelerating beyond the speed of sound and creating a mini-sonic boom. That little flick at the end causes the tip to snap out at incredible speed.
Now as far as a big sonic boom, I haven't heard one either. I'm sure there are some pretty strict regulations about not creating sonic booms in civilian areas.
GMD
Re:EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom (Score:3, Interesting)
Think of standing in front of a *really* powerful subwoofer, but without any crappy booty
Re:EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom (Score:4, Interesting)
It was pretty cool... a very low boom as if someone had set off explosives somewhere a distance away. The windows rattled in their frames. I didn't know it was a sonic boom at the time, but it was mentioned on the news later.
Re:EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom (Score:3, Informative)
I can't find any news article about it any more
The incident occurred on June 17. There's a brief reference to it here [f-16.net].
Generally, the military restricts supersonic speed over land to altitudes above 30,000 feet to limit the intensity of the sonic boom. It is probably a measure of the urgency of that mission that the F-16s broke the sound barrier so soon after take off.
Re:EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom (Score:5, Informative)
http://users.wpi.edu/~jbendor/F-14%20Sonic%20Boom
Re:EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom (Score:2)
I think I see the tel-tale signs of an aircraft carrier as the camera pans left.
So that's probably out to sea.
There's another of an F-14 doing the same thing floating about the internet, only the air is moist so the shockwave cone shows visibly in a cloud-like mist.
Way cool. (I'd upload my copy, but I have no servers capbable of a pseudo-slashdotting.)
Re:EVERYONE has heard a sonic boom! (Score:2)
heard one last summer.... (Score:2)
It sounded like an bomb explosion a few 100m away. No high pitch noises, but a solid "whooop" that made me check if any window had cracks. In fact the window need my desk vibrated visibly. Even through the windows it could be felt in the belly like an effect in a thx theatre.
To make it short, its not a sound, its more like a shockwave. Bein
Re:really a problem? (Score:2, Interesting)
When the shuttle was flying and they landed at Cape Canaveral I would hear the sonic booms as they would pass over Orlando. Was woken up a few time in the early morning hours as they went over at 30000 or 40000 feet and it was enough to make the windows rattle. In that case it was a double sonic boom, like two claps of thunder. BOOM BOOM!
Multiply that b
Re:really a problem? (Score:2)
A few years back I was sitting in my car near Orlando and there was a very big thump. I quick made sure none of the idiot lights on the dash had gone on and then I looked around wondering if some crane somewhere had just dropped an I-beam. Then I remembered: "Oh yeah, the shuttle is landing today."
The best analogy I can think of is a small, sharp earthquake. There's a reason why seismographs pick them up.
Re:really a problem? (Score:2)
It would get old fast if it happened regularly.
Re:really a problem? (Score:2)
Think about the military.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Is that really a big problem? It seems kind of dumb to me to ban supersonic flight over cities.
There are certainly very important military implications to being able to go supersonic without a boom. If you have a plane capable of going supersonic, but is indistinguishable from noise on radar thanks to stealth technology, a sonic boom is one thing that could give you
Re:really a problem? (Score:3, Informative)
Let's rather make subsonic planes silent (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Let's rather make subsonic planes silent (Score:2)
Re:Let's rather make subsonic planes silent (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Let's rather make subsonic planes silent (Score:2)
Which makes for one weird sensation the first time you fly out of Orange County / John Wayne Airport. The takeoff starts normally, tons of thrust, engines blasting. Then as soon as they've reached a certain altitude, they cut the engines way back, which causes the plane to drop a bit, or at least stop climbing so rapidly. Which gives you a kind of over-a-rise on a rollercoaster feeling -- not what you want to feel when flying commercially. I don't know if they still do, but when I flew out of there several
It's also reducing aerodynamic noise, too. (Score:3, Insightful)
A less-known problem is that of the noise rushing around the airframe at flight speeds, which can also generate a lot of noise that could be heard from the ground. Fortunately, modern computational fluid dynamic research has reduced this problem, even on the upcomin
There will still be protests (Score:4, Interesting)
Then, once they heard the landing (which wasn't any louder than a regular plane landing), they went back to their caves and silently watched the news for another issue to get their panties in a bunch about. *sigh*
Re:There will still be protests (Score:5, Informative)
My company's UK office is very close to the flight paths into and out of Heathrow. Work comes to a stop when the Concord flies anywhere near on take off. No one notices the other commercial jets. I didn't notice it until last summer. Most of my time in the UK office was spent while those beasties were grounded. It was quite noticible when they were allowed back in the air.
Re:There will still be protests (Score:2)
I beg to differ. The Concord[e]'s landings may not be any louder than a regular commercial jet. I don't recall it being particularly loud. But take-off is another thing altogether.
And by God, what a noise. Especially when you're standing right by the fence and she's low enough for the wake vortices to kick up a dust storm. Hooyeh. (I'd just washed the car, too.)
I feel I have to point out that the God-awful roar of those lovely, lovely engines is not the sonic boom. It always made me smile when some cant
its not the landing (Score:3, Informative)
In fact, no kidding the people at the airport the plane lands at dont hear a boom! Obviously, the plane slows down to subsonic speeds prior to landing. But for everyone in between the takeoff and landing airport that the plane flies over, will be subjected to it.
Henc
Re:There will still be protests (Score:2)
Re:There will still be protests (Score:2)
Just more of the same? (Score:2, Interesting)
Or an interesting method I heard about involving many tiny flaps on the surface which can dynamically shape the airflow to minimize turbulence?
wow (Score:2, Funny)
Dissapointing... (Score:3, Interesting)
In fact, this research is primarily intended for the next generation business jets , not the military. The future of such planes is up in the air in the moment, because not only do they have to reduce the wake of sonic booms (they shatter windows and suprise people), the regulations have to change. I for one know that the FAA is slow at that.
Regarding the need for windows in airliners: A Boeing 777 pilot today needs to be able to see a few hundred feet ahead of him on takeoff, but after rotating off the runway, he doesn't need to see anything at all. Modern airliners can land and auto-flare... that is, land themselves in ZERO visibility conditions. The pilots undergo extra training for this, of course.
Re:Dissapointing... (Score:3, Interesting)
I beg to differ. Unless the plane is in controlled airspace, there will be aneed to look out for other traffic (actually not a bad idea even in controlled airspace). The 1978 crash in San Diego took place between two aircraft that were both in contact with air traffic control.
Re:Dissapointing... (Score:3, Insightful)
While it is the responsibility of all pilots to "see and avoid" other traffic, if instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) exist, that's not possible. But if IMC exists, then pilots who aren't instrument-rated had damn well better not be flying in it.
Now, if a controller fucks up and vectors two planes into each other, well, how, exactly were the pilots supposed to see that coming in
Re:Dissapointing... (Score:2, Informative)
I'm a low time pilot, but I can tell you that most of the time in controlled airspace, the controllers do their job well. The problem is on the weekends at uncontrolled airports...
Re:Dissapointing... (Score:2)
Therefore, if we can train people to expect shattered windows, we have won half the battle.
Well, hopefully... (Score:2)
Professor Paul R. Garabedian (Score:2, Interesting)
a 1971 paper (Score:2, Informative)
"Calculation of inviscid, subsonic-supercritical flow around prescribed airfoils is described. This supplements the authors' previous design of a shockless transonic wing using real and complex characteristics in the hodograph plane. The flow about the designed wing is calculated for a range of off-design conditions.
"Neumann's problem for the flow-potential equa
Cheap Better Than Quiet; Really Loud = C-141's (Score:2)
BTW, the loudest aircraft I've heard is a water-injected C-141 taking off about 3 miles away. Most have been painful for the crew.
Re:Cheap Better Than Quiet; Really Loud = C-141's (Score:2)
"Silent but Deadly" Technology... (Score:2)
Not me! (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't be alarmed... MY ASS!
If you watch cable TV shows much, no doubt you've seen your share of close-calls in airplanes.
Yes, there are plenty of occasions where all the instruments fail, the power goes out, the hydraulics go out, etc. People still survive because, despite the high-tech systems, there is still JUST ENOUGH under manual control that a very good pilot in decent weather can land such a crippled plane.
Good luck doing that when they can't even see! And don't bother telling me that they're going to have multiple cameras, with backup systems and all that, I've already heard of plenty of cases where all 3 computer systems on 747s have failed. That's not one case, but MANY independant cases.
As you can probably assume, I'm not afraid of technology in the slightest. However, I do know that even the most advanced and well-tested technology in the real world can fail. If you aren't willing to trust electronic voting machines, are you really ready to give technology 100% control over matters of life and death?
The $100 million executive jet? (Score:2)
And note that this boom-diffuser approach increases drag, which means more fuel consumption. As a rule of thumb, supersonic flight uses 3x as much fuel per unit distance as subsonic flight already. This is worse. And it still produces an 0.5psi overpressure, which is above what the FAA allows now.
It can probably be made to work, but a
Time to revive Sonic Cruiser? (Score:2)
Imagine something derived from the shelved Sonic Cruiser design, but carefully shaped to eliminate the pressure wave buildup that causes the sonic boom in the first place. The result could be a Mach 1.7 airliner that could:
1. Fly at 55,000 feet with just about no so
We already have surprise (Score:3, Funny)
What the fuck kind of idiocy is this? First of all, we already have stealth technology so we're already catching our opponents by surprise. Second, sonic booms are detected AFTER the aircraft flies overhead -- not before! The whole phenomenon of a sonic boom is that the aircraft is racing ahead of the "information" of its arrival (in the form of sound waves).
I'm not saying that a sonic-boom-free aircraft is of no military use. The shockwaves responsible for sonic booms cause drag to increase signficant
Re:We already have surprise (Score:2)
Re:We already have surprise (Score:5, Informative)
Re:We already have surprise (Score:2, Interesting)
Plastic surgery, radar, GPS, lightwieght turbine engines, helicopter advances, LORAN, jet engines, no nothing good came from defense R&D.
Re:We already have surprise (Score:3, Informative)
ObPedant (Score:2)
I don't think fuel cost was the real killer, Concorde used about 1 tonne of fuel per passenger, so (say) $500 of fuel for a ticket that was probably around $4000, one way.
Re:The whole point of this project... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sending 'stealth' planes into airspace that has no defending air force is not exactly a 'proof of the concept'. Coulda flown into iraq using a concorde, complete with it's huge sonic trail, would not have made any difference, there was no air force to defend anyways.
Stealth planes are not undetectable, they are just more difficult to detect than traditional aircraft. Countries with the will, and
Re:The whole point of this project... (Score:3, Insightful)
A better analogy is armor. Whatever armor you have, the enemy can make ordnance to penetrate it. But is still better to defend against an armor brigade with $2 million Abrahms tanks, rather than a fleet of $20,000 jeeps.
Re:so much for science.... (Score:2)
Re:so much for science.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What's all this good for? (Score:3, Funny)
I agree. Faster, cheaper travel never benefitted mankind in any way. Only fat, rich, white men could possibly want to travel the world in a timely, affordable manner.
Re:What's all this good for? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, this has military applications as well. Lots of things do. The medical resarch you mention has been perverted to war before, for just one example. If you would like to see this knowledge focused on peaceful persuits and shared for the benefit of all, more power to you. It is not going to be possible to share it with businesses across the country and still keep it a military secret. All you have to do to help mankind here is pressure the people talking about applying it to silencing commercial aircraft to keep that promise, and it will make things better for lots of people.
Re:What's all this good for? (Score:2, Insightful)
I find it paradoxal that the bleeding hearts will criticise the US military to no end, when there very right to express those opinions has been secured by the technological edge that allowed the US and its allies to win both WWII and the Cold War.
You needn't be an avid fan of the current government's decisions to realise that many *many* people have benefited enormously from the security and technological advances that were pioneered by this
Re:What's all this good for? (Score:3, Informative)
correct, but the Concorde didn't ordinarily use afterburners [concordesst.com]; it had them only for the greater thrust demands at take-off and during acceleration, not for cruise. it was an expensive plane to run largely because of its low seating capacity [concordesst.com] and short range [concordesst.com], which barred it from many of the lucrative trans-Pacific routes.
(some have also argued [avg-aerospace.com] that the low-to-nil bypass ratio of the Concorde's Olympus engines made it more expensive to run.
Re:What's all this good for? (Score:2, Insightful)
You know, you're absolutely right. I am totally against the difficulties that we create for developing nations, that keep them from putting their goods (usually agricultural) on our markets.
The fact is, both the United States *and* Europe are guilty, one as much as the other.
That said, many African governments have adopted protectionist policies of Marxist inspiration. Mugabe is only the latest and most flagrant example; it's been happening for decades. So you can't expect Co
Re:Pointless CEO toys (Score:3, Funny)
Re:flying saucers are boomless (Score:2)
The simple fact is that no credible scientific evidence of alien visitation has been documented.
The second simple fact is that no credible scientific efforts to gather such evidence have been made.
Why should I or a scientist for that matter take the idea in the least seriously? Once fraud and wishful thinking is accounted for, 99.99999999999% of the "evidence" for UFOs (and any number of other "fantastic" things) vanishes like a fart in the wind. I have yet to see evidence of tech humans aren't capab
Re:Going faster and faster ? (Score:2)