Skip Top nav bar link group topnav end piece go to business section go to education section go to history section go to gallery section go to news section go to organizations section go to research section go to search engine go to site index topnav end piece
NASA Meatball X-43A  Photo Collection banner
 
X-43A

Employees atop DFRC's main building celebrate the return flyby of the B-52B aircraft after it launched the second X-43A aircraft on its successful flight.

 
Photo Number: EC04-0095-43
Photo Date: March 27, 2004
 
Formats: 532x480 JPEG Image (182 KBytes)
1135x1024 JPEG Image (891 KBytes)
2661x2400 JPEG Image (4827 KBytes)
 
Photo
Description:
Employees atop NASA Dryden's main building celebrate the return flyby of the B-52B aircraft after it launched the second X-43A aircraft on its successful flight.
 
Project
Description:
The high-risk, high-payoff X-43A flights are the first actual flight tests of an aircraft powered by a scramjet engine capable of operating at hypersonic speeds (above Mach 5, or five times the speed of sound). The X-43A is powered by a revolutionary air-breathing supersonic-combustion ramjet or "scramjet" engine.

In a combined research effort involving Dryden, Langley, and several industry partners, NASA demonstrated the value of its X-43A hypersonic research aircraft, as it became the first air-breathing, unpiloted, scramjet-powered plane to fly freely by itself. The March 27 flight, originating from NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, began with the Agency's B-52B launch aircraft carrying the X-43A out to the test range over the Pacific Ocean off the California coast. The X-43A was boosted up to its test altitude of about 95,000 feet, where it separated from its modified Pegasus booster and flew freely under its own power.

Two very significant aviation milestones occurred during this test flight: first, controlled accelerating flight at Mach 7 under scramjet power, and second, the successful stage separation at high dynamic pressure of two non-axisymmetric vehicles. To top it all off, the flight resulted in the setting of a new aeronautical speed record. The X-43A reached a speed of over Mach 7, or about 5,000 miles per hour faster than any known aircraft powered by an air-breathing engine has ever flown.

 
NASA Photo by: Tom Tschida
 
Keywords: X-43A, X-43, Hyper-X, scramjet, launch, flight 2, hypersonic research vehicle, Pegasus booster rocket, B-52, B-52B, mach 7
 


Last Modified: April 8, 2004
Responsible NASA Official: Marty Curry
Curator: PAO Webmasters

NASA Website Privacy Statement