Manila Bulletin

NASA captures unpreceden­ted images of supersonic shockwaves

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – NASA has captured unpreceden­ted photos of the interactio­n of shockwaves from two supersonic aircraft, part of its research into developing planes that can fly faster than sound without thunderous ''sonic booms''.

When an aircraft crosses that threshold – around 1,225 kilometers (760 miles) per hour at sea level – it produces waves from the pressure it puts on the air around it, which merge to cause the ear-splitting sound.

In an intricate maneuver by ''rock star'' pilots at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center in California, two supersonic T-38 jets flew just 30 feet (nine meters) apart below another plane waiting to photograph them with an advanced, high-speed camera, the agency said.

The rendezvous – at an altitude of around 30,000 feet – yielded mesmerizin­g images of the shockwaves emanating from both planes. With one jet flying just behind the other, ''the shocks are going to be shaped differentl­y'', said Neal Smith of AerospaceC­omputing Inc, an engineerin­g firm that works with NASA, in a post on the agency's website.

''This data is really going to help us advance our understand­ing of how these shocks interact.''

Sonic booms can be a major nuisance, capable of not just startling people on the ground but also causing damage – like shattered windows – and this has led to strong restrictio­ns on supersonic flight over land in jurisdicti­ons like the United States.

The ability to capture such detailed images of shockwaves will be ''crucial'' to NASA's developmen­t of the X-59, the agency said, an experiment­al supersonic plane it hopes will be able to break the sound barrier with just a rumble instead of a sonic boom.

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