NASA’s X-59 Quiet
SuperSonic Technology (QueSST) is being built by Lockheed Martin at its Skunk
Works Facility in Palmdale, California. This
airplane is designed to fly at supersonic speeds without making sonic booms. The airplane has a unique shape that allows
it to make quieter sonic ‘thumps’ that can barely, if at all, be heard on the
ground.
Currently, our
laws prohibit aircraft from flying faster than the speed of sound over land,
however, if an airplane can fly supersonic at an
acceptable noise level, then these laws can be changed.
There is a very
interesting time-lapse video that is available that shows the airplane’s construction
period from May 2019 to June 2021. You
can see it at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcvYjkCBY28&t=57s. “The extensive use of features and
pre-drilled, full-size fastener holes has significantly reduced the time it
takes to locate and fit parts, especially mating large assemblies like this,”
said David Richardson, Lockheed Martin program director. “It is sort of like how Legos go
together. We used the laser tracker to
make sure it is all aligned per the engineering specs before we permanently
bolted it all together.”
Works Cited
Matt Kamlet, NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center.
(2022, January 5). NASA’s X-59 Kicks Off 2022 in Texas for Ground Testing.
Retrieved from www.nasa.gov:
https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/image-feature/x59-ground-testing.html
Michael Tyrrell, L. M. (2022, Fedbruary 16). X-59
quiet supersonic jet enters next phase after assembly. Aerospoace
Manufacturing.
Sasha Ellis and Evan Flatt of NASA Langley Research
Center. (2021, August 3). X-59 Resembles Actual Aircraft. Retrieved
from NASA: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/x-59-resembles-actual-aircraft
So cool! I'll be keeping an eye on this.
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