
NASA Completes Prelim Design of Low-boom Demonstrator
Testing of low-boom technologies is viewed as critical to repeal of the current prohibition of supersonic flight over land.
NASA announced recently that it is one step closer to testing successful sonic-boom-mitigation technology on a demonstration aircraft, a move viewed as critical to repeal of the prohibition of supersonic flight over land. That prohibition is viewed by many as a limiter on the supersonic business jet market.
The agency has completed the preliminary design review (PDR) of its Quiet Supersonic Transport (QueSST) aircraft design. QueSST is the initial design stage of NASA’s planned low boom flight demonstration (LBFD) experimental airplane. NASA partnered with lead contractor Lockheed Martin in February 2016 for the QueSST preliminary design.
Flight testing of an LBFD X-plane could begin as early as 2021. Remaining design validations scheduled for the next few months include a static inlet performance test and a low-speed wind tunnel test at NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia.